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Infection and Immunity, July 2006, p. 3979-3986, Vol. 74, No. 7
0019-9567/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.01657-05
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Institute of Primate Research, P.O. Box 24481, Karen, Nairobi, Kenya,1 Department of Parasitology, Leiden University Medical Centre, 2300 RC Leiden, The Netherlands,2 Department of Biology, University of York, York YO10 5YW, United Kingdom3
Received 11 October 2005/ Returned for modification 11 December 2005/ Accepted 5 April 2006
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The radiation-attenuated (RA) schistosome vaccine is highly effective under laboratory conditions but, for ethical and practical reasons, cannot be used in humans. Nevertheless, it serves as a compelling model for the development of a recombinant vaccine (4, 27). The protective capabilities of the RA vaccine were originally established in rodents (6) and subsequently extended to primates (8, 21, 28, 29), with up to 86% protection obtained after five vaccinations of the olive baboon (Papio anubis) (11). The baboon has the capacity to harbor a substantial schistosome infection long term, unlike mice, which succumb to egg-induced pathology even with low worm burdens (26). This makes it an ideal host in which to investigate the interaction of infection and vaccination. Another advantage of baboons is that they are closer phylogenetically and in body scale to humans, so that experimental results are likely to have a greater relevance (15). Furthermore, protective immunity can be assessed not only by comparison of worm burdens recovered from test and control animals but also via indirect estimates of infection, namely, fecal egg output and the level of schistosome antigens circulating in the bloodstream. These last two are the measures of efficacy that would be used in field trials of a human vaccine.
We report here two experiments designed to discover whether vaccine efficacy is compromised when either prior infection is terminated by drug treatment or the vaccination regime is superimposed on a chronic infection. The results reveal that the dominant immune responses to adult worm and especially egg antigens elicited by a schistosome infection do not compromise those to the RA vaccine that parallel the development of protection.
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Parasitology. Groups of baboons (n = 5 to 7) were exposed to cercariae as previously described (22, 28). They were vaccinated percutaneously with 9,000 attenuated cercariae (30-krad gamma radiation) on five occasions at 4-week intervals (11, 28). A dose of 1,000 normal cercariae was used for the initial infection, while all animals received 800 cercariae at challenge. The health of the animals was monitored throughout the experiments, and rehydration therapy was given to those that experienced diarrhea during the acute phase of the infection. As an indirect measure of worm burden, mean eggs per gram (epg) was estimated from three 50-mg fresh fecal samples collected at weekly intervals from 4 weeks after primary or challenge infections, using the Kato/Katz smear technique (11, 23). The degree of vaccine-induced protection was determined by recovery of adult worms from baboons at 10 weeks postchallenge by perfusion of the hepatic portal vasculature (22, 28). The percent protection was calculated from the mean worm burdens, epg, or circulating antigen levels, using the formula: % protection = [(control test)/control] x 100. In order to eliminate the primary infection, anesthetized animals, prior to vaccination or challenge, were given two doses of Praziquantel (PZQ; Biltricide, Bayer East Africa, Nairobi, Kenya), 1 week apart, by oral gavage at a dose of 60 mg/kg. Treatment was judged successful when egg-negative fecal samples were obtained on two consecutive weeks.
Assays. Blood for serum was obtained from each animal at baseline and at regular intervals during the 47-week period. The parasite antigen preparations used for assay of antibody responses were material released during cercarial transformation into schistosomula (0-3hRAP), soluble proteins from adult worms (SWAP), and soluble proteins from eggs (SEA) (1, 13). Antigen-specific immunoglobulin M (IgM) and IgG antibodies in serum were measured by ELISA (11). Plates were coated with 0-3hRAP (0.25 µg/ml), SWAP (10 µg/ml), or SEA (5 µg/ml), and sera were diluted as follows: 0-3hRAP, 1/3,200; SWAP, 1/400; and SEA, 1/12,000. As a second indirect estimate of worm burden the glycans, circulating anodic antigen (CAA) and circulating cathodic antigen (CCA), which are released into the bloodstream from the parasites' gut, were measured by antigen-capture ELISA with specific monoclonal antibodies (7, 17).
Pathology. A subjective assessment of gross pathology was made at 6 and 10 weeks postchallenge. At the earlier time point a laparotomy was performed on anesthetized animals to permit visual inspection of the intestines and liver (9). After taking a wedge biopsy (approximately 10 g), the edges of the liver were opposed and sutured, and the abdominal incision was closed by standard surgical procedures. At the 10-week time point, liver samples were obtained immediately after vascular perfusion. All samples were fixed in phosphate-buffered formalin prior to sectioning and staining with hematoxylin and eosin, prior to histopathological examination and evaluation of granulomata where present.
Experimental design. For logistical reasons, the study was divided into two independent experiments (Table 1). In experiment A we determined whether a preceding schistosome infection terminated by drug treatment had any impact on the protection elicited by subsequent exposures to the RA vaccine. The experimental groups were identified as ITV (for infected, treated, vaccinated), IT (for infected, treated), TV (for treated, vaccinated), and control (C1). In experiment B we determined whether the superimposition of the RA vaccine on a chronic schistosome infection affected the level of protection induced. The experimental groups were identified as IVT (for infected, vaccinated, treated), VT (for vaccinated, treated), and control (C2). The infection was terminated by PZQ treatment at weeks 12 and 13 in experiment A and at weeks 32 and 33 in experiment B; in the latter case, this was necessary so that only challenge worms would be counted. Irrespective of the infection and/or vaccination regime, animals were challenged at 37 weeks with normal cercariae and worm burdens were determined 10 weeks later.
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TABLE 1. Experimental plan
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FIG. 1. Infection status of baboons between primary exposure and challenge at 37 weeks, determined by three independent measures: eggs/gm feces (epg) (A), CAA (B), and CCA (C). Experimental groups were ITV and IT plotted as combined data and IVT. PZQ treatment of the ITV and IT groups was at weeks 12 and 13, and the IVT group was treated at weeks 32 and 33 (arrows in panels A and B). Regression analysis was performed on IVT data between weeks 12 and 32: y = 14.1x + 603 (P < 0.005) (A); y = 0.029x + 14.33 (NS) (B); and y = 0.214x + 39.7 (NS) (C). Values are means + the SEM (n = 5 to 7).
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FIG. 2. Infection status of baboons from challenge to perfusion, determined by epg (A and B), CAA (C and D), and CCA (E and F). Groups in experiment A (infection, treatment, vaccination, challenge) are plotted in panels A, C, and E, and groups in experiment B (infection, vaccination, treatment, challenge) are plotted in panels B, D, and F. Values are means + SEM (n = 5 to 7).
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FIG. 3. Worm burdens after challenge and perfusion for experiment A (infection, treatment, vaccination, challenge) (A) and experiment B (infection, vaccination, treatment, challenge) (B). The percent protection relative to controls is indicated above each bar:
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TABLE 2. Percent protection measured by worm burden, eggs per gram of feces, and circulating antigen levels (CAA and CCA)
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FIG. 4. Antibody profiles over the whole time course probed by using 0-3hRAP (cercarial secretions). For experiment A (infection, treatment, vaccination, challenge) the IgM levels are plotted in panels A, C, E, and G, and the IgG levels are plotted in panels B, D, F, and H for groups ITV, IT, TV, and C1, respectively. For experiment B (infection, vaccination, treatment, challenge) the IgM levels are plotted in panels I, K, and M and the IgG levels are plotted in panels J, L, and N for groups IVT, VT, and C2, respectively. Five vaccinations were given at 4-week intervals starting at week 18 in experiment A and week 14 in experiment B. PZQ treatment (arrow below x axis) was at weeks 12 and 13 in experiment A and at weeks 32 and 33 in experiment B. Values are means + the SEM (n = 5 to 7).
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At 6 weeks postchallenge, all previously infected and/or vaccinated animals displayed mild to moderate hepatic pathology at the gross level, which was manifested as periportal inflammatory cell infiltration but with no classical granulomata that warranted measurement. In contrast, all of the challenge controls had florid granulomatous inflammation that was graded as moderate or severe. The distinction at the gross level between previously exposed and control animals persisted at 10 weeks. Nevertheless, granulomata were present in all animals exposed to the vaccine only as well as the challenge controls, with no significant difference in mean granuloma size (Fig. 5). However, no measurable granulomata were evident around eggs in the majority of previously infected animals (all six ITV, four of six IVT, and two of six IT).
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FIG. 5. Hepatic egg granuloma dimensions at 10 weeks postchallenge for experiment A (infection, treatment, vaccination, challenge) and experiment B (infection, vaccination, treatment, challenge). Circles and solid bars represent individual and mean values, respectively (n = 5 to 7). The number of animals in each group with zero granulomas is depicted above the x axis.
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Human trials of recombinant vaccines against schistosomiasis mansoni will have to rely on indirect assays to estimate the intensity of the infection. The circulating antigen assays are used for diagnosis but sometimes also to estimate the intensity of infection (18, 24). Unfortunately, it is difficult to envisage how the mathematical form of the relationship between each indirect measure and worm burden or the absolute sensitivity (i.e., the minimum number of worms detectable) could be established for humans. However, it is clear that the three assays have limitations for evaluating differences in the intensity of infection, and hence protection. Based on the data from this and our previous study (11), fecal egg output overestimated protection on nine of nine, CAA on six of nine, and CCA on four of five occasions, making CAA the best predictor. Unlike our previous study, we cannot ascribe overestimation by fecal egg counts to the delayed arrival of parasites in the portal tract since the 10-week interval to perfusion was selected to provide an adequate margin after patency. While the lower egg output per female in the infected and vaccinated groups relative to the controls suggests an anti-fecundity effect, which would partly account for the overestimation, no such disparity was observed in the vaccine-only groups. In the former groups other factors deriving from the prior infection status, such as greater retention of eggs in the intestine or proportionally greater deposition in the liver, might explain the lower egg output, but histological analyses of intestinal and liver tissues did not reveal a discrepancy (unpublished data).
We can be confident that the initial cercarial exposures resulted in substantial primary infections, thus providing the necessary immunological background for the vaccination experiments. On the basis of the indirect assays, parasite development was virtually identical in the two experiments up to 13 weeks. The trough in egg output between weeks 9 and 11 coincided with the acute phase of infection when all animals experienced diarrhea and is likely to be an artifact since eggs are difficult to discern in smears made from loose stools. Although the early patterns of CAA and CCA production differed, both circulating antigens quickly reached equilibrium, albeit at different absolute levels. In animals receiving later treatment, there was a significant decline in egg output during the chronic phase, which could reflect either worm attrition or reduced fecundity. Since the uniform circulating antigen levels between weeks 12 and 32 indicate normal feeding patterns without worm death, we suggest that the decline in fecal egg output represents an antifecundity effect. The absence of a parallel infection-only group does not allow us to attribute this phenomenon to the superimposed vaccinations. However, in an earlier study no decline in fecal egg output was observed over a 30-week period after exposure of baboons to 1,000 cercariae (22), suggesting the vaccinations are responsible.
Since we had found antibody responses to be more informative than those of peripheral blood mononuclear cells in our previous study (11), we used changes in parasite-specific IgM and IgG levels as indicators of host immune reactivity to infection and vaccination. In animals given a primary infection, the most prominent feature before challenge was the overwhelming response to parasite egg deposition, which made it difficult to discern a contribution from vaccination. One explanation for the intense response to eggs relative to attenuated larvae is the enormous disparity in antigen load, such that the egg production in a single day was greater than the entire biomass of five doses of the vaccine. In the previously infected and treated baboons (ITV group), it was possible to detect an IgG response to the vaccine above the background provided by the IT group. In both experiments drug treatment failed to boost antibody levels, which is surprising given the amount of antigen that would be released into the bloodstream following worm death. This was not the experience with responses in human populations, where there was a significant rise in antibody levels 5 weeks after drug treatment of schoolchildren (2, 19). It seems unlikely that the discrepancy can be attributed to differences in worm burden between the cited human study and our own because fecal egg output was comparable.
After challenge, the impact of the vaccination regimes is clearly visible when we examine the parasitological and immunological parameters. In all but one instance, the vaccinated groups had depressed profiles of egg output and circulating antigen levels relative to their respective controls. The latter groups mirrored both the pattern of egg output and the circulating antigen production after the primary infection except that no decline in fecal eggs was observed at the 9- and 10-week sampling times. Potential explanations include less severe diarrhea due to the smaller worm burden postchallenge or slower maturation of worms. Characterization of antibody profiles after challenge revealed that previously infected animals lacked a secondary IgM response and showed only a muted IgG response compared to both vaccinated-only and control groups. These observations provide the best evidence that immune responses to eggs had downmodulated irrespective of whether the animals had been exposed to a 12- or a 32-week primary infection. In contrast, after the onset of egg deposition, the two vaccinated-only groups showed a marked antibody response. In spite of lower worm burdens, the IgM levels were equivalent to those of their respective controls, whereas the IgG levels were higher. It would appear that the antigens from vaccinating larvae are qualitatively or quantitatively insufficient to cause immune downmodulation. Indeed, the stronger secondary IgG response of vaccinated-only animals after egg deposition implies that exposure to larvae primes for egg antigens.
Overall, our observations suggest that the protective immune responses elicited by the RA vaccine are distinct from those made to the egg and imply that current or previous schistosome infections are not interfering with the vaccination protocol. By extension, this situation should pertain to the antigenic targets that mediate protection elicited by the RA vaccine, provided that they can be identified, expressed as recombinants, and administered to replicate the same immunological mechanisms. Recent developments in analysis of the S. mansoni genome, transcriptome, and proteome should facilitate the identification of these antigenic targets (5, 25). Simultaneously, and before any S. mansoni recombinant antigen vaccines are taken forward to human trials, the need for more sensitive predictors of worm burden should be addressed. The baboon appears to be the ideal animal in which to authenticate such tools for determining vaccine efficacy.
We thank S. Kiarie and S. Kisara for help with parasitological assays and portal perfusions; F. Nyundo and K. Kithome for technical support in immunological assays; D. Chai and M. Ndungu for surgical procedures; the animal care staff at IPR, Nairobi, Kenya; and D. Kornelis at LUMC, Leiden, The Netherlands for performing the circulating antigen assays.
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