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Infection and Immunity, April 2005, p. 2005-2011, Vol. 73, No. 4
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.4.2005-2011.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Defence Science and Technology Laboratory, Porton Down, Salisbury, Wiltshire,1 Cobra Biomanufacturing Plc, The Science Park, Keele, Staffordshire, United Kingdom2
Received 13 September 2004/ Returned for modification 18 October 2004/ Accepted 2 November 2004
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If a strain is auxotrophic for an essential metabolite due to a chromosomal gene mutation, the mutation can be complemented with a functional, plasmid-borne copy of the gene. This enables plasmid selection on agar plates if the metabolite is not present and maintenance in vivo if the metabolite cannot be scavenged from the recipient animal. The choice of the essential gene used for complementation of a host auxotrophy is critical. The thymidylate synthetase gene thyA has been used for plasmid maintenance in Salmonella (13), but growth in culture was restricted to minimal medium as thymidine is present in complex nutrient broth media (14). A similar approach was used for Vibrio cholerae with a plasmid complementing a mutation in the chromosomal glutamine synthetase gene glnA, although antibiotic resistance genes were present on the plasmid to enable selection in complex media (21). The strain was able to survive in vivo even without a plasmid by obtaining sufficient glutamine from the host. An alternative approach involves diaminopimelic acid (DAP), a bacterial amino acid that is not found in eukaryotes, so mutants with mutations in lysine-DAP biosynthetic pathway genes can be grown in complex media when they are complemented with a plasmid expressing the gene product. The asd (aspartate ß-semialdehyde dehydrogenase) gene is a DAP biosynthetic gene that has been used to complement asd mutants of both Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (5, 17) and S. enterica serovar Typhi (25).
When an auxotrophy is effectively complemented and the essential metabolite is not present in the culture medium or the recipient animal, plasmids can still be lost at a high rate, but cells die if they lose the plasmid. Nakayama et al. (17) and Galán et al. (5) cultured asd mutant strains for 50 generations and demonstrated that a significant proportion of the plasmid was lost with DAP present. However, the rate of plasmid loss would have been equivalent in the absence of DAP, but it could not be recorded since plasmid-free segregants lysed. Therefore, there is no increase in the total number of plasmid-containing cells when there is complementation of a host auxotrophy, but there is a transition from plasmid-free cells to dead cells. Gene dosage and metabolic burden are key factors in plasmid loss, since a single chromosomal gene is complemented on a multicopy plasmid. This is the most likely explanation for the instability of plasmids expressing asd (5, 17). As the cells synthesize excess DAP, coupled with the continual release of DAP into the growth medium from reprocessing of the cell wall, the selection pressure is effectively removed, and plasmid loss occurs. Another disadvantage of the approach of complementing auxotrophies is the limitation of the choice of the essential gene. The selective metabolite must be absent from the recipient animal cells and, ideally, from complex nutrient broth, but it must be possible to add it to the medium for growth prior to transformation. This rules out the majority of essential genes.
In an alternative approach that has been evaluated for plasmid stabilization the postsegregational killing mechanism is used. This approach relies on a stable toxin and labile antitoxin expressed from a plasmid; the toxin kills any cell that loses the plasmid after antitoxin degradation (2). The hok-soc postsegregational killing system has been tested in S. enterica serovar Typhi, but it proved to be ineffective for plasmid maintenance during prolonged culture, as plasmid-free segregants that escaped the lethal effects of the toxin rapidly proliferated in the culture (6). In comparison, integration of the vaccine antigen gene into the bacterial vector chromosome does address the genetic stability problem for recombinant vaccines (11). However, lower expression levels from a single gene could lead to a weak or ineffective immune response compared to that obtained when a multicopy plasmid is used. In addition, antibiotic gene-free integration is technically difficult compared to plasmid transformation.
To solve the problems inherent in existing gene stabilization technologies, we adapted operator-repressor titration (ORT) for use in live vaccine vectors. ORT is an antibiotic-free plasmid maintenance system that was originally developed in Escherichia coli (3) and is currently used for the production of therapeutic recombinant proteins and plasmids (9). We engineered the attenuated S. enterica serovar Typhimurium strain SL3261 to generate the ORT strain SLDAPD. In SLDAPD, the essential gene dapD is controlled by the operator/promoter of the E. coli lactose operon. The LacI repressor binds to the chromosomal lac operator, and cell growth is prevented unless an inducer, such as isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG), is present. However, if a multicopy plasmid that also possesses the lac operator sequence is transformed into SLDAPD, it titrates the repressor away from lacO and enables gene expression and cell growth. Here we describe selection and stable in vivo maintenance of a high-copy-number plasmid by ORT in SLDAPD. Furthermore, in this study we demonstrated an application of the ORT technology by vaccination of mice with SLDAPD containing a plasmid expressing the F1 antigen of Yersinia pestis but no selectable marker gene in order to achieve protection against plague.
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(Life Technologies), XL10-GoldKan (Stratagene, Amsterdam, The Netherlands), and DH1lacdapD (3). The pUC18I plasmid (4) is a modified version of pUC18 in which the alpha peptide has been deleted and replaced by an ideal palindromic lac operator (22, 23). pAH34L is a kanamycin-selected plasmid and expresses the caf operon from Y. pestis, comprising the F1 antigen (caf1) and the following three genes required for its assembly and export: caf1R (regulatory protein), caf1 M (molecular chaperone), and caf1A (outer membrane anchor) (26). All reagents and kits were obtained from commercial sources, and the manufacturers' instructions were followed. All bacterial cultures were grown in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium at 37°C, and the medium was supplemented when required with kanamycin (50 µg/ml), ampicillin (100 µg/ml for E. coli and 25 µg/ml for S. enterica serovar Typhimurium), chloramphenicol (20 µg/ml), DAP (80 µg/ml), IPTG (0.1 mM), and/or sucrose (0.5%, wt/vol).
Construction of ORT-VAC strain SLDAPD.
The following procedure was used to construct ORT-VAC strain SLDAPD (the term ORT-VAC is used to describe live vaccine delivery of the ORT technology). An expression cassette was constructed that contained lacIq and lacO/P-dapD replacing natural dapD in SL3261. pTrc99 (Pharmacia Biotech) (1) was cut with PflMI and blunt ended by using T4 DNA polymerase. The E. coli lacO/P-dapD expression cassette was removed from placPdapD6 (3) as an AflII-EarI fragment and blunt ended. These two fragments were ligated to create pTrc99dapD, in which dapD and lacIq were divergently oriented. The 5' and 3' flanks of the dapD chromosomal locus of SL3261 were amplified by PCR; the 5' flank was amplified with primers 5STdapD (5'-CGAATGGCATGCGGCCGCAGCTATTTTTATCAGGATTTG-3') and LST2dapD (5'-GCGAATGCATAGCGGGGGCGACAGCCCCCCTTTGC-3'), resulting in a 2,406-bp PCR product, and the 3' flank was amplified with primers RSTdapD (5'-GCTTTTCACTCGATGCATCTACCCTTTATCGTTTGGATTGAGGGCC-3') and 3STdapD (5'-TGTGGGGCATGCGGCCGCAGTGGTCGCACATCGTCGGAC-3'), resulting in a 1,361-bp PCR product. Primers 5STdapD and 3STdapD contained SphI and NotI sites, respectively (underlined); primers LST2dapD and RSTdapD contained NsiI sites (boldface type). Both flanks were cloned into pGEM-T Easy (Promega, Southampton, United Kingdom) to create pGEM-TeasydapDL() and pGEM-TeasydapDR(). The right flank was cut out of pGEM-TeasydapDR() as an NsiI fragment, blunt ended, and ligated into Ecl136II-cut pTrc99dapD to create pDRdapD(+). Then the left flank was cut out of pGEM-TeasydapDL() as an NsiI fragment and ligated into NsiI-cut pDRdapD(+) to create pdapDB(+). The insert from pdapD(+) was cut out as a NotI fragment and ligated into NotI-cut pKO3 (12) to create the integration plasmid pKO3dapD. pKO3dapD was then used as described by Link et al. (12) to replace wild-type dapD with lacZ-dapD and lacIq in SL3261. The resulting strain was designated SLDAPD, and its genotype was hisG aroA554
(dapD)::(lacIq Plac-dapD).
Construction of ORT-VAC plasmid pAHL. Plasmid pAH34L was digested with NcoI and BssHII to remove the kan gene. The fragment was then ligated to a synthetic oligonucleotide encoding an ideal palindromic lac operator. This plasmid, designated pAH34LORT, was selected in DH1lacdapD, but it was not possible to transform it into SLDAPD due to the methylation barrier between E. coli and S. enterica serovar Typhimurium. To overcome this problem, a kan gene was cloned back into a unique SalI site of pAH34LORT, generating plasmid pAHLK, which was transformed into SLDAPD and selected on LB agar containing kanamycin and IPTG. DNA with a Salmonella methylation pattern was then prepared from SLDAPD/pAHLK and digested with SalI to remove kan and create pAHL. This DNA was transformed into SLDAPD and selected by ORT on LB agar with no additives. The sequence of pAHL is identical to that of pAH34LORT, but these plasmids differ in genealogy and methylation.
Growth analysis in culture. Single colonies were inoculated into 5 ml of LB broth and grown overnight at 37°C in an orbital shaker at 200 rpm. These precultures were used to inoculate 50 ml of LB broth in 250-ml baffled Erlenmeyer flasks to a starting optical density at 600 nm of 0.01, and readings were taken hourly. All experiments were performed in triplicate.
Detection and localization of F1 antigen expression. F1 antigen expression was detected by Western blotting. Cells were resuspended in Tris-HCl (50 mM, pH 8) containing RNase A (100 µg/ml) and benzonase (1 U/µl) and then lysed with alkaline sodium dodecyl sulfate. The cell lysates were incubated at 37°C for 20 min to obtain sufficient degradation of the nucleic acids. Samples of the cell lysates were then mixed with a reducing agent and sample loading buffer, heated for 5 min at 95°C, loaded on a sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel, and transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane. The membrane was then treated as described by Oyston et al. (18) by using mouse monoclonal anti-F1 antigen and alkaline phosphatase-labeled polyclonal rabbit anti-mouse antibody (Abcam, Cambridge, United Kingdom). Bound antibodies were detected by using nitroblue tetrazolium chloride-5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indoyl phosphate (toluidine salt). To demonstrate surface expression of the F1 antigen on SLDAPD/pAHL, 1 x 108 CFU of bacteria was placed into a glass-bottom WillCo-dish (Intracel, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom) and allowed to dry. The bacteria were fixed in acetone for 2 min or left unfixed and then probed with rabbit polyclonal anti-F1 antigen serum at 37°C for 1 h, and binding was detected by incubation with fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled goat anti-rabbit antibody at 37°C for 1 h. The bacteria were washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) between steps. Fluorescence was visualized with an Olympus IX70 confocal laser scanning microscope, and images were captured and processed by using the Fluoview image software (Olympus, London, United Kingdom). Similar results were obtained for fixed and unfixed cells, although unfixed cells were localized in clumps around the edges of the coverslip as a result of the washing procedure.
In vitro plasmid maintenance. Single colonies were inoculated into 50 ml of LB broth (containing the appropriate antibiotic) and incubated overnight at 37°C in an orbital shaker at 200 rpm. The optical density was determined on day zero, and then 50 ml of fresh LB broth was inoculated to an A600 of 0.001 and incubated as described above to obtain day 1 values. This process was repeated until day 5. The cells grew approximately 12 generations per day for 5 days, so there were 60 generations during the experiment. A number of cells that gave an A600 (i.e., optical density at 600 nm) in 1.0 ml of culture of 2.0 was extracted daily, and plasmids were extracted by the mini-prep procedure (QIAGEN, West Sussex, United Kingdom) and examined by agarose gel electrophoresis. To determine plasmid maintenance, volumes equivalent to an A600 value of 107 were plated onto permissive and nonpermissive media, and the colonies were counted.
Inoculations and in vivo plasmid maintenance. Strains were cultured statically overnight at 37°C and then centrifuged (6,000 x g, 20 min, 4°C), washed once in PBS, recentrifuged, and resuspended in PBS to a final density of approximately 1 x 1010 to 5 x 1010 CFU/ml (for colonization studies) or 1 x 1011 to 5 x 1011 CFU/ml (for protection studies). Viable bacteria were enumerated on LB agar plates containing IPTG, ampicillin, and kanamycin when appropriate. Subsequently, groups of 30 female BALB/c mice (Charles-River Laboratories, Kent, United Kingdom) were orally inoculated with approximately 1 x 109 to 5 x 109 CFU of Salmonella/100-µl dose by using an intragastric gavage needle. On days 8, 12, and 16 postinoculation, 10 mice were culled by cervical dislocation, and the spleen and six Peyer's patches of each mouse were removed. The spleen or the six Peyer's patches were homogenized in 1 ml of sterile PBS by using 50-µm-pore-size cell strainers (Becton Dickinson Labware, Franklin Lakes, N.J.), and suitable dilutions were plated onto suitable agar for enumeration. Specifically, SL3261 was plated onto LB agar only, SL3261/pUC18I was plated onto LB agar and LB agar containing ampicillin, SLDAPD/pUC18I was plated onto LB agar containing IPTG or ampicillin, SL3261/pAH34L was plated onto LB agar and LB agar containing kanamycin, and SLDAPD/pAHL was plated onto LB agar and LB agar containing IPTG.
Protection against Y. pestis and immune response analysis. Groups of four to six female BALB/c mice were orally inoculated with approximately 1 x 1010 to 5 x 1010 CFU of the relevant Salmonella strain/100 µl, either once or twice (days 0 and 14). Mice were individually labeled with microchips with unique reference numbers so that their immune responses could be monitored throughout the experiment. Prior to challenge with Y. pestis, tail vein serum samples were taken from the mice and used in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to detect the presence of immunoglobulin G (IgG) against F1 antigen, as described previously (15). All samples were assayed in duplicate. The end point antibody titer was expressed as the maximum dilution of sample that gave an absorbance at 414 nm of more than 0.1 U after subtraction of the absorbance due to nonspecific binding detected in control sera from mice immunized with the control strain SLDAPD or SL3261, as appropriate. The ELISA results were expressed as log10 of the reciprocal of the dilution and the mean of duplicate values for each sample. Fifty days postimmunization, mice were challenged subcutaneously with approximately 102 (185) CFU or 105 (1.85 x 105 or 8.8 x 104) CFU of Y. pestis GB. Y. pestis GB has a median lethal dose (MLD) of <1 CFU in BALB/c mice when the subcutaneous route is used (20). The mice were observed for 20 days with strict observance of humane end points, and the time to death was recorded. At the end of this period two surviving mice from each group were dissected, and blood, spleen, lung, liver, and inguinal and mediastinal lymph node samples were homogenized and plated onto Congo red agar to detect any remaining Y. pestis. The remaining animals were humanely culled.
Statistical analyses.
The mean and standard error of the mean were calculated. Student's t tests were used to determine the significance of differences between means for groups, and probability values of
0.05 were considered significant.
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FIG. 1. Conversion of SL3261 to SLDAPD and plasmid selection by ORT. (A) Wild-type dapD locus in SL3261. (B) Replacement of dapD with the lacO/P-dapD-lacIq cassette to create SLDAPD. Induction with IPTG is required for dapD expression in the absence of a plasmid. (C) When the organism is transformed with a plasmid containing a lacO sequence, the repressor is titrated and dapD is expressed.
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Plasmid maintenance with ORT. To demonstrate the ORT technology for live vaccine vectors, we investigated plasmid maintenance in SLDAPD containing pUC18I, a derivative of pUC18 with the lacO1 and lacO3 operators replaced with the ideal lacO (4). Serial subculture in LB broth in the absence of antibiotics showed that equivalent colony numbers were obtained on LB agar plates for total viable cells (with IPTG) and plasmid-containing cells, indicating that there had been no plasmid loss over the 5 days of culture. Subsequently, maintenance of plasmid pUC18I in SLDAPD was evaluated in vivo. Following intragastric inoculation of BALB/c mice with 1 x 109 to 5 x 109 CFU of SLDAPD/pUC18I or SL3261/pUC18I, recombinant bacteria could be detected in the spleens and Peyer's patches of all groups of mice (individual samples are shown in Fig. 2; mean results are shown in Table 1). However, significantly lower numbers of SL3261/pUC18I cells were detected on LB agar plates containing ampicillin than on LB agar plates, indicating that plasmid pUC18I was lost from the bacteria. In comparison, similar numbers of SLDAPD/pUC18I cells were detected on LB agar plates containing IPTG and LB agar plates containing ampicillin, showing that the plasmid was stable. In some cases, SL3261/pUC18I and SLDAPD/pUC18I were detected at significantly lower levels than SL3261 in both spleens and Peyer's patches. This may have reflected the burden on Salmonella of harboring the high-copy-number plasmid pUC18I.
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FIG. 2. Colonization of spleens and Peyer's patches following oral inoculation of mice (n = 10) with SLDAPD or SL3261 carrying plasmid pUC18I. Mice were inoculated with 5 x 109 CFU of SLDAPD/pUC18I (circles), SL3261/pUC18I (triangles), or control strain SL3261 (squares) by using a gavage needle. Spleens (A) and Peyer's patches (B) were removed 8, 12, or 16 days after inoculation and homogenized in PBS before preparations were plated onto LB agar (solid symbols) or LB agar containing ampicillin (open symbols) for enumeration of bacteria.
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TABLE 1. Stability of plasmids following intragastric inoculation of micea
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FIG. 3. Conversion of the kanamycin-resistant plasmid pAH34L to the ORT plasmid pAHL by replacement of kan with ideal lacO.
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ORT Salmonella strain expressing F1 antigen provides protection against plague. In Y. pestis, F1 antigen is expressed at 37°C but not at 28°C. Here, Western blotting was used to detect expression of F1 antigen in SL3261/pAH34L and SLDAPD/pAHL after induction at 37°C, and immunofluorescence confocal microscopy was used to demonstrate the surface location of expressed F1 antigen on SLDAPD/pAHL (Fig. 4).
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FIG. 4. Analysis of Y. pestis F1 antigen expression. (A) Western blot probed with an anti-F1 antigen mouse monoclonal antibody. Lane 1, recombinant F1 antigen reference; lane 2, SL3261 grown at 37°C; lane 3, SLDAPD grown at 37°C; lane 4, SL3261/pAH34L grown at 28°C; lane 5, SL3261/pAH34L grown at 37°C; lane 6, SLDAPD/pAHL grown at 28°C; lane 7, SLDAPD/pAHL grown at 37°C. (B) Expression of F1 antigen on the surface of SLDAPD/pAHL grown at 37°C. Immunofluorescently labeled SLDAPD/pAHL fixed cells were detected by confocal microscopy.
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TABLE 2. Survival of immunized mice after Y. pestis challengea
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FIG. 5. F1 antigen-specific IgG responses induced in individual mice following immunization with Salmonella expressing F1 antigen. Groups of BALB/c mice (n = 6) were orally immunized with a single dose of 1 x 1010 to 5 x 1010 CFU of ORT strain SLDAPD/pAHL or original vaccine strain SL3261/pAH34L. Serum samples were removed 41 days after inoculation, and IgG responses were measured by ELISA. The results are expressed as the reciprocal of the end point dilution for each animal group. The limit of detection is indicated by the horizontal dashed line. Mice were subsequently challenged with 185 MLD (A) or 1.85 x 105 MLD (B) of Y. pestis GB. The asterisks indicate mice that did not survive the Y. pestis infection.
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It is known that plasmids with the high-copy-number pMB1 origin of replication, such as pUC18I, are unstable in Salmonella (24), so we first wanted to compare stability using this plasmid in a conventional Salmonella vaccine strain and an ORT-VAC strain. We based our ORT-VAC strain (SLDAPD) on S. enterica serovar Typhimurium SL3261, an auxotrophic, avirulent, live vaccine model strain that has previously been used to immunize mice against virulent strains of Salmonella (10), as well as for vaccine delivery against a range of other infections, including influenza A virus (27) and Y. pestis (26).
When pUC18I was transformed into SLDAPD, the organism was maintained in liquid culture with no indication of plasmid loss. With alternative plasmid stabilization systems, plasmid loss is often masked by the death of cells that lose the plasmid. Untransformed SLDAPD does grow well in liquid culture in the absence of DAP or IPTG, but it is unable to grow in the same medium on agar plates. Thus, plasmid loss in culture should be detectable by plating onto LB agar containing IPTG, but such plasmid loss was not seen in this study. In vivo, pUC18I was unstable in SL3261 but was successfully stabilized in SLDAPD. The degree of plasmid loss in SL3261/pUC18I was apparent when we compared the number of total viable cell counts with the number of plasmid-containing cell counts in organs removed from orally inoculated mice; the latter number was generally lower, indicating that the plasmid was indeed being lost but the plasmid-free segregants were surviving. This plasmid loss was more acute in the spleen than in the Peyer's patches. This may reflect the greater metabolic burden on bacteria that reach the spleen than on bacteria that do not penetrate further than the Peyer's patches. The untransformed SL3261 cells were present in tissues in larger numbers than the equivalent plasmid-containing cells of both strains, indicating that there was a metabolic burden on replicating pUC18I even though the only expressed gene was bla (encoding ß-lactamase for ampicillin resistance). This illustrates that for recombinant protein delivery, an antibiotic or other expressed gene is an undesirable element that may reduce the fitness of the live vaccine vector strain. A further advantage of the ORT-VAC technique over plasmid maintenance systems that rely upon complementation of a host auxotrophy is that the selective gene is present as a single, chromosomal copy, thus preventing overexpression of the complementary gene product and loss of selection pressure, which are inherent in the use of plasmid-borne selective genes.
We also investigated whether a plasmid that has been shown to give a protective immune response, pAH34L, could be successfully adapted to create an antibiotic gene-free vaccine delivery system. A Salmonella vaccine strain containing this plasmid, SL3261/pAH34L, was previously shown to protect against a high challenge dose of Y. pestis, the causative agent of plague, following two oral immunizations. Thus, we transformed the adapted plasmid, pAHL, into SLDAPD for further evaluation. In vitro experiments showed that the plasmid was maintained in liquid culture with no indication of any plasmid loss. pAHL was also stable in SLDAPD in vivo, like pAH34L in SL3261.
The pSC101 origin of replication in pAHL gives a copy number of approximately six per chromosome (24), yet our results show that this is sufficient to cause titration of the lac repressor in both ORT strain DH1lacdapD (see Material and Methods) and ORT-VAC strain SLDAPD. It has previously been shown that medium-copy-number plasmids based on pBR322 (39 to 55 copies per cell) can be selected by ORT in DH1lacdapD with LacI at 20 copies per cell (4). However, pAHL is the lowest-copy-number plasmid that has been selected by ORT so far, and it is the first plasmid selected with a copy number lower than that of the repressor protein. This is more remarkable in SLDAPD, in which LacI expressed from lacIq provides approximately 200 copies per cell in E. coli (16), although the value may be lower in S. enterica serovar Typhimurium.
We used the BALB/c mouse model of Y. pestis infection to evaluate whether the antibiotic gene-free ORT-VAC strain SLDAPD/pAHL provided a level of protection against plague similar to that conferred by SL3261/pAH34L. Following single or double oral vaccination with either SLDAPD/pAHL or SL3261/pAH34L, high titers of serum F1 antigen-specific IgG were detected. A single oral inoculation of either vaccine protected five of six mice against 185 MLD of virulent Y. pestis. This is the first demonstration that a single oral inoculation of Salmonella expressing F1 antigen can protect against plague. Furthermore, partial protection against a high-level challenge (approximately 105 MLD of Y. pestis) was observed in mice given a single oral inoculation of SLDAPD/pAHL (three of six mice) or SL3261/pAH34L (four of six mice). All survivors of Y. pestis infection showed F1 antigen-specific IgG responses equivalent to or greater than those in nonsurvivors, suggesting that antibody to F1 antigen provides an indicator of protection, as described previously (15). Administering two doses of either vaccine could produce complete protection against this high-level challenge. These results show promise for future development of a highly protective, orally delivered, antibiotic-free vaccine against plague.
In conclusion, we constructed S. enterica serovar Typhimurium strain SLDAPD, which allows antibiotic-free plasmid selection and maintenance in a complex medium of high- and very-low-copy-number plasmids by ORT. This strain allows stable in vivo maintenance of pUC18I in mice, whereas this plasmid was lost from parental strain SL3261. In addition, we applied ORT-VAC technology to a Salmonella-based vaccine against plague. The ORT-VAC technology should therefore permit construction of versatile strains of recombinant bacteria that can be used as live vaccine vectors. These strains will not need antibiotic resistance or any other genes for stable plasmid maintenance and will have the advantage of potentially higher levels of antigen expression than would be possible by single chromosomal integration of an antigen gene.
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glnA balanced lethal plasmid system for expression of heterologous antigens by attenuated vaccine vector strains of Vibrio cholerae. Infect. Immun. 68:221-226.
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