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Infection and Immunity, May 2004, p. 2507-2512, Vol. 72, No. 5
0019-9567/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.72.5.2507-2512.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center and the Department of Medicine, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee,1 ID Biomedical Corporation of Washington, Bothell, Washington,2 ID Biomedical Corporation of Quebec, Montreal, Quebec, Canada3
Received 14 November 2003/ Returned for modification 2 January 2004/ Accepted 16 January 2004
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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The search for an effective vaccine to prevent group A streptococcal infections has been ongoing for many decades. One of the major vaccine candidates is the surface M protein, which is a primary virulence determinant of these organisms (18). Conserved C-repeat regions of the M proteins have been shown to evoke protective immune responses after mucosal administration (3, 7, 14). The type-specific N-terminal regions of M proteins contain epitopes that evoke serum bactericidal antibodies after parenteral administration (2). It was previously shown that recombinant multivalent M protein-based vaccines containing N-terminal peptides from 4, 6, 8, and 26 different M serotypes evoke opsonic antibodies to the respective vaccine strains after intramuscular injection (10, 12, 13, 17). In addition, it was shown that intranasal (i.n.) administration of a recombinant fusion protein containing an N-terminal peptide of type 5 M protein and the B subunit of Escherichia coli labile toxin protected mice from intraperitoneal challenge infections with type 5 streptococci (11).
We undertook the present studies to determine the protective efficacy of a multivalent M protein-based vaccine formulated with various mucosal adjuvants and administered via the i.n. route. As a prototype vaccine, we selected the recombinant hexavalent protein that has been the subject of previous reports with animals (10) and a recently completed phase I clinical trial in adult volunteers (unpublished data). The hexavalent protein was formulated with liposomes with and without monophosphorylated lipid A (MPL), cholera toxin (CT) B subunit (CT-B) with and without holotoxin (CT), or proteosomes, which are composed of outer membrane proteins of Neisseria meningitidis complexed with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from Shigella flexneri (Pr/LPS) (15). The immunogenicity of the i.n. vaccine formulations was evaluated by measuring specific antibody levels in serum and saliva from immunized and control mice. In addition, lymphocyte proliferation and ELISPOT assays were performed using cells from spleen or cervical lymph nodes (CLN) to measure systemic or local immune responses, respectively, and to quantify Th1- or Th2-type responses. Protective efficacy was determined after i.n. challenge with virulent type 24 streptococci.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Vaccine formulations. Liposomes were prepared with or without lipid A (Ribi Immunochem, Hamilton, Mont.) as previously described (1, 20). The bulk lipid consisted of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (Genzyme, Cambridge, Mass.), cholesterol (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.), and dimyristoyl phosphatidylglycerol (Genzyme) at a molar ratio of 3:1:0.25, respectively. The final product contained approximately 20 µg of bulk lipid/µl. The formulations were suspended in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), pH 7.4, and consisted of hexavalent protein (30 µg/10-µl dose) encapsulated in liposomes with lipid A (2.8 µg/dose) (hexa/liposomes/MPL) or in liposomes alone (hexa/liposomes). Liposomes were also formulated without hexavalent protein or lipid A for use as a control. Liposome size was 1,700 to 2,100 nm as determined by dynamic light scattering.
Formulations containing CT were prepared by mixing hexavalent protein with either CT-B (Sigma) or CT-B plus holotoxin (CT) (Sigma) in PBS, pH 7.4, to achieve concentrations of 30 µg of hexavalent protein and 33 µg of CT-B with or without 2.5 µg of CT (hexa/CT-B/CT and hexa/CT-B, respectively) per 10-µl dose. Formulations containing only CT-B and CT were prepared at 33 and 2.5 µg, respectively, per dose for use as a control.
Proteosomes were prepared as previously described (15) from outer membrane proteins of group B N. meningitidis complexed with purified LPS from S. flexneri serotype 2a (Pr/LPS). The weight ratio of outer membrane proteins to LPS was approximately 1:1. The final vaccine formulation consisted of 30 µg of hexavalent protein and 7.5 µg each of proteosome protein and LPS (hexa/Pr/LPS) in PBS, pH 7.4, per 10-µl dose. Pr/LPS formulated without hexavalent protein was used at 7.5 µg/dose as a control.
Immunization of mice. Adult (7- to 8-week-old) female BALB/c mice were obtained from Harlan (Indianapolis, Ind.). After very light anesthesia, mice were immunized i.n. with formulations of hexavalent vaccine (30 µg of hexavalent protein per dose) containing either liposomes (hexa/liposomes), liposomes with lipid A (hexa/liposomes/MPL), CT-B with or without CT (hexa/CT-B/CT or hexa/CT-B, respectively), or Pr/LPS (hexa/Pr/LPS). Control mice were given either liposomes, CT-B/CT, or Pr/LPS alone in PBS i.n. The total volume of vaccine given to each mouse was 10 µl. Ten mice were immunized per group. Additional age-matched mice were immunized i.n. with hexa/Pr/LPS or given Pr/LPS alone for use in lymphocyte proliferation and ELISPOT assays. Mice were immunized at 0, 2, 4, and 8 weeks when vaccines containing liposomes or CT were used or at 0, 2, and 6 weeks when Pr/LPS was used.
Collection of serum and saliva. Sera and saliva were obtained prior to immunization and at 1 to 3 weeks following the final dose of vaccine. Anesthetized mice were bled by puncturing the retro-orbital plexus by using microhematocrit capillary tubes (Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, Pa.). Blood was allowed to clot at room temperature, and the clot was allowed to retract at 4°C overnight. Serum was separated from red blood cells by microcentrifugation and stored at 4°C until tested. Saliva samples were obtained after light anesthesia by rinsing the mouth three to four times with 150 µl of PBS, pH 7.4, containing a complete protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche Diagnostics, Basel, Switzerland). Saliva samples were stored at 20°C until tested.
Detection of antibodies. An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was used to measure specific antibody in preimmune and immune mouse sera and saliva. Purified recombinant hexavalent fusion protein or purified recombinant dimeric amino-terminal M peptides (5 µg/ml) were bound to flat-bottomed microtiter wells (Nunc-Immuno modules; Nalge Nunc International, Roskilde, Denmark) in 0.1 M sodium carbonate, pH 9.8 (100 µl/well), overnight at 37°C. Excess peptide was removed, and wells were washed five times with 0.15 M NaCl containing 0.05% Tween 20 (Sigma).
Mouse sera were serially diluted from 1:100 in PBS, pH 7.4, containing 0.05% Tween 20 (PBS/TW). Diluted sera or undiluted saliva samples were added to wells (100 µl/well) and incubated at 37°C for 2 h. Unbound primary antibody was removed, and the wash step was repeated. Alkaline phosphatase-conjugated goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin G (IgG), IgA, and IgM (ICN Biomedicals, Inc., Irvine, Calif.) was diluted 1:10,000 or 1:2,000 in PBS/TW and added to wells (100 µl/well) to detect specific serum or salivary antibody, respectively. Incubation followed at 37°C for 2 h.
After removal of unbound secondary antibody and washing, disodium p-nitrophenol phosphate (Sigma) at 1 mg/ml in 1 M Trizma base-0.3 mM MgCl2, pH 9.8, was added (100 µl/well). Substrate was allowed to develop for 20 or 30 min for serum or saliva samples, respectively. Serum antibody titer was defined as the reciprocal of the highest dilution of serum which yielded an absorbance of
0.1 at 405 nm. Specific salivary antibody was expressed as fold increase in absorbance at 405 nm between pre- and postimmunization samples.
Preparation of lymphocytes. Mice were immunized with hexa/Pr/LPS or Pr/LPS, as described above, and were given booster doses 6 months later. Spleens and CLN were harvested 8 days later, and mononuclear cells were pooled from four or five mice per group for use in the blastogenesis and ELISPOT assays. Tissues were minced with sterile forceps in HL-1 tissue culture medium (Cambrex Bio Science Walkersville, Inc., Walkersville, Md.) supplemented with 2 mM L-glutamine (Gibco Invitrogen Corp., Invitrogen Life Technologies, Carlsbad, Calif.), 1% penicillin-streptomycin (Gibco Invitrogen Corp.), 0.05 mM 2-mercaptoethanol (Sigma), and 0.1% bovine serum albumin, low endotoxin (Sigma) (HL-1 complete). Lymphocytes were purified from cell suspensions with the use of Hystopaque-1077 (Sigma), washed, counted, and adjusted to desired concentrations in HL-1 complete medium for use in lymphocyte assays.
Lymphocyte proliferation assays. Lymphocytes (5 x 106/ml) were stimulated with various concentrations of hexavalent protein (1 to 30 µg/ml) or concanavalin A (0.25 µg/ml) (Sigma) in 96-well tissue culture plates (Corning Inc., Corning, N.Y.) for 72 h at 37°C with 5% CO2 and humidity. Cells were tested in triplicate for each antigen concentration. [3H]thymidine (Perkin-Elmer, Inc., Boston, Mass.) was added (1 µCi/well), and the cells were incubated for an additional 6 h. Cells were harvested onto glass fiber filters (Packard Instrument Co., Meriden, Conn.) with a Packard Filtermate 196 cell harvester (Packard) and allowed to dry overnight at room temperature, and radioactivity was measured using a Matrix 96 direct beta counter (Packard). Counts per minute for each sample tested were divided by counts per minute for respective negative controls (i.e., cells incubated without antigen) to obtain a stimulation index. Lymphocyte proliferation was expressed as a mean stimulation index for each sample tested in triplicate.
ELISPOT assays for hexavalent protein-specific antibodies and cytokines.
Specific antibody-, interleukin-4 (IL-4)- or gamma interferon (IFN-
)-producing cells were enumerated using modifications of the enzyme-liked immunospot (ELISPOT) assay (9, 16). Sterile MultiScreen 96-well ELISPOT HP plates (Millipore Corp., Bedford, Mass.) were utilized. Hexavalent protein (30 µg/ml), anti-mouse IL-4 antibody, or anti-mouse IFN-
antibody (5 µg/ml each) (BD Biosciences PharMingen, San Diego, Calif.) was bound to the plates in sterile PBS, pH 7.4 (100 µl/well), for 16 to 18 h at 4°C for the enumeration of antibody-, IL-4-, or IFN-
-producing cells, respectively. Excess protein was removed, and the plates were washed and blocked with HL-1 complete medium containing 10% sterile-filtered fetal bovine serum (FBS; HyClone Laboratories, Logan, Utah). Lymphocytes from spleen or CLN were cultured in duplicate in HL-1 complete medium at various concentrations (0.63 x 105 to 1 x 106/100 µl) and stimulated with either bound hexavalent protein (for antibody-producing cells) or with 100 µl of hexavalent protein at 30 µg/ml in HL-1 complete medium (for cytokine-producing cells) for 40 h at 37°C with 5% CO2 and humidity. Negative-control wells contained cells with 100 µl of additional medium, while positive-control wells included cells with concanavalin A (cytokine-producing cells) or additional hexavalent protein (antibody-producing cells).
Cell suspensions were aspirated, and wells were washed twice with deionized water (200 µl/well for 3 min/wash) and then three times with PBS/TW (200 µl/well). Horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated anti-mouse IgG, IgA, and IgM (ICN Biomedicals, Inc.) were diluted 1:2,000 for use as the detection antibody for antibody-producing cells. Biotinylated anti-mouse IL-4 or IFN-
(BD Biosciences PharMingen) was diluted for use at 2 or 0.5 µg/ml, respectively, as detection antibody for cytokine-producing cells. Detection antibodies were diluted in PBS with 10% FBS (PBS/FBS), added to appropriate wells (100 µl/well), and incubated at room temperature.
After 2 h of incubation, wells containing biotinylated anti-mouse IL-4 and IFN-
antibodies were aspirated and washed three times with PBS/TW. Avidin-HRP (BD Biosciences PharMingen) was diluted 1:100 in PBS/FBS, added to these wells (100 µl/well), and incubated for 1 h at room temperature. Wells containing HRP-anti-mouse IgG, IgA, and IgM were not disturbed and were allowed to continue incubation.
All wells were aspirated and washed four times with PBS/TW and two times with PBS, pH 7.4. Spots formed by antibody- or cytokine-producing cells were developed using the substrate 3-amino-9-ethylcarbazole provided in a 3-amino-9-ethylcarbazole substrate kit (BD Biosciences PharMingen). Substrate was prepared and filtered just prior to use at 100 µl/well and allowed to react for 50 min. Wells were aspirated, washed once with deionized water, and allowed to air dry overnight at room temperature. Spots were analyzed and enumerated using a Zeiss Axioplan 2 scope and KS ELISPOT software (Carl Zeiss, Inc., Gottingen, Germany). The mean number of spots for each duplicate sample was calculated and expressed as the mean number of antibody-, IL-4-, or IFN-
-producing cells per lymphocyte population.
i.n. challenge with group A streptococci. Immunized and control mice were challenged via the i.n. route (6) with 4 x 107 type 24 streptococci (Vaughn strain) and observed for 15 days. Ten mice were challenged from each group unless otherwise noted. Challenge took place 8 weeks after the last immunization was administered.
Statistical analysis.
Statistical comparisons were made using a one-way analysis of variance with JMP Version 4 software (JMP Sales, Cary, N.C.). A P value of
0.05 was considered significant.
| RESULTS |
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Type-specific serum antibody responses. When mouse sera were tested against the individual type-specific peptide components of the hexavalent vaccine, antibodies to M24, M6, M5, and M19 peptides were detected in mice immunized with hexa/liposomes/MPL (Table 1). Levels of antibody specific for M24 and M6 in these mice were significantly higher than those in control mice (P < 0.05). For mice given the hexa/liposome formulation, serum antibody reactivity was very low to undetectable with each M peptide. Specific antibodies to M24, M6, and M5 were also detected in immune sera from mice given either hexa/CT-B or hexa/CT-B/CT. Immune sera from mice immunized with hexa/Pr/LPS contained antibodies to M3, M5, M6, and M24. The levels of M24-specific antibody in these mice were significantly greater than those in the respective control animals (P < 0.05). All respective control mice in each group had antibody titers of <100 against each type-specific peptide (Table 1).
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-producing lymphocytes from both spleen and CLN in mice given hexa/Pr/LPS than from control mice (P < 0.05) (Table 2). Also, the numbers of cytokine-producing cells from CLN were significantly greater than the numbers of those from the spleen (P < 0.05). These data indicate that both Th1 and Th2 cytokines were produced in both the spleen and CLN in response to i.n. immunization with Pr/LPS-adjuvanted hexavalent protein. The ratios of IFN-
to IL-4 of 3.2 and 4.6 in the spleen and CLN, respectively, suggest that the responses in both compartments were weighted toward the Th1 phenotype. Hexavalent protein-specific ASCs detected by ELISPOT assays were more numerous in animals immunized with hexa/Pr/LPS than in control mice. However, only specific ASCs from CLN of immunized mice were found to be significantly higher in number (P < 0.05). These data indicate that both cellular and humoral immune responses were stimulated both locally and systemically by the hexa/Pr/LPS vaccine formulation given i.n. and that locally responding cells in CLN are greater in number than are cells involved in a systemic response. Protection against i.n. challenge with group A streptococci. Mice were challenged i.n. with 4 x 107 virulent type 24 group A streptococci. A protection rate of 80% was observed for mice immunized with the hexa/liposome/MPL formulation (Fig. 3A). The survival rate for mice immunized with the hexa/liposome vaccine was 44% (one mouse from this group died prior to challenge). Only 20% of the control mice that received liposomes alone survived the challenge infections.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Previous studies from our laboratory have shown that pretreatment of group A streptococci with type-specific M protein antibodies prevented infection of mice challenged via the i.n. route (6). In addition, i.n. immunization with peptide M24, which represents the type-specific amino-terminal half of the M24 protein, also protected mice against i.n. challenge infections (6). Common epitopes of M proteins located in the C-repeat region of the molecules are exposed on the surface of the organisms and evoke mucosal antibodies in mice that block colonization and infection (3, 7, 14). In some studies, serum antibodies to C-repeat epitopes promoted moderate levels of opsonization (5), whereas in others they had no opsonic activity (3, 7). Nonetheless, it appears that mucosal antibodies that bind to exposed M protein epitopes in sufficient quantity can prevent infection in mice independent of serum bactericidal antibodies.
In the present study, the hexavalent vaccine formulated with several different mucosal adjuvants and delivered via the i.n. route evoked protective immune responses against i.n. challenge infections with type 24 streptococci. The vaccines evoked serum antibodies and low levels of salivary antibodies to the hexavalent protein. An analysis of serum antibody responses against the type-specific component peptides of the vaccine revealed that not all were equally immunogenic. The hexavalent vaccine is a fusion protein that contains six different N-terminal M protein peptides ranging in size from 35 to 80 amino acids (10). The N-terminal peptide is M24, followed by M5, M6, M19, M1, and M3. The M24 peptide is reiterated in the C-terminal location. Previous studies have shown that the C-terminal epitopes of multivalent fusion proteins might be preferentially degraded in vivo, thus becoming nonimmunogenic haptens (12, 13). The M24 peptide was repeated on the C-terminal end of the protein to function as a sacrificial peptide in order to protect the M1 and M3 peptides (10), which were the least immunogenic in the present study. We speculate that mucosal administration may result in greater proteolytic degradation of the protein, resulting in low levels of immunogenicity of the M1 and M3 peptides. Future studies will determine if administration of higher doses of the vaccine protein might overcome this problem.
The present studies were designed to compare the protective immunogenicities of the hexavalent protein formulated with several different mucosal adjuvants. CT, which is known to have potent adjuvant activity, was used as a standard to which the other adjuvants were compared. Levels of protection following i.n. challenge infections ranged from 44% in mice that received hexa/liposomes to 100% in mice that were immunized with hexa/CT-B/CT or hexa/Pr/LPS. Apart from the group that received hexa/liposomes, there were no statistical differences in titers of serum antibodies to the hexavalent protein or survival among the mice that were immunized with vaccines containing the four remaining adjuvants. Our goal is to identify adjuvants that may be suitable for eventual clinical trials with more complex multivalent M protein-based vaccines. Although CT is a potent adjuvant, its safety profile has been less than optimal (21). In the present studies, liposomes containing MPL and proteosomes complexed with LPS from S. flexneri had adjuvant activity equivalent to that of each other and to that of CT-B/CT. Furthermore, the hexavalent protein formulated with Pr/LPS stimulated a significant number of hexavalent protein-specific ASCs in CLN and a cytokine profile that indicated a Th1-weighted mixed Th1-Th2 response. The successful protective, antibody, and cellular responses elicited by the Pr/LPS adjuvanted hexavalent protein were particularly encouraging for development of a nasal streptococcal vaccine for humans, since this adjuvant preparation already has a good safety profile for i.n. human use as shown by preclinical toxicity studies and in human phase I and phase II clinical trials (15, 19).
Taken together, our results indicate that mucosal administration of multivalent streptococcal vaccines evokes protective immune responses in mice. Because the hexavalent protein contains opsonic M protein epitopes and we did not perform experiments to assess levels of mucosal colonization following challenge infections, we were unable to determine if protection was primarily mediated by the mucosal or by the systemic immune responses. Nonetheless, these results serve as a basis for further studies to identify optimal mucosal vaccine formulations that may be suitable candidates for clinical evaluation.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Scott Brown, Department of Immunology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tenn., for his assistance with the ELISPOT imaging system and software.
| FOOTNOTES |
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