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Infection and Immunity, December 2008, p. 5738-5744, Vol. 76, No. 12
0019-9567/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.00874-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina,1 CONICET, Buenos Aires, Argentina,2 Channing Laboratory, Department of Medicine, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts3
Received 15 July 2008/ Returned for modification 27 August 2008/ Accepted 17 September 2008
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75% of human isolates, and it has been shown that antibodies to the CPs have some protective efficacy for preventing staphylococcal infections in experimental animals (8, 22). However, two phase III clinical trials of a combined CP5-CP8 conjugate vaccine failed to show a cumulative reduction in episodes of S. aureus bacteremia in patients undergoing hemodialysis (38; http://www.nabi.com/pipeline/clinicaltrials.php#1).
There were probably numerous factors that were responsible for the failed CP vaccine trials, and these factors are poorly understood. Certainly, a vaccine that targets only encapsulated S. aureus does not protect against the 20 to 25% of clinical isolates that lack a capsule. Previous studies have demonstrated that CP is produced in vivo in animal models of staphylococcal infection (19, 23). However, the expression of S. aureus CP5 and CP8 is highly sensitive to several environmental signals, including nutrient and iron availability (32). In addition, CP is not expressed by S. aureus in the logarithmic phase of growth (32) or in the presence of
1% CO2 (15, 26). Furthermore, CP expression has been shown to be downregulated during chronic staphylococcal lung infection in cystic fibrosis patients (14) and in a guinea pig model of S. aureus implant infection (10). We have shown that loss of CP expression facilitates S. aureus internalization into bovine epithelial cells (2, 44) and contributes to the persistence of S. aureus in infected mammary glands of mice (44). Therefore, development of a vaccine for S. aureus requires addition of other bacterial components, as suggested previously (42), to ensure effectiveness with capsule-negative S. aureus.
Clumping factor A (ClfA) is a cell wall-anchored S. aureus surface protein that has been shown to enhance staphylococcal virulence in animal infection models (27, 49). ClfA has been suggested as a vaccine potential candidate (17, 18, 31) and as a target for passive immunization approaches (6, 33, 46). In a phase III clinical trial, 1,983 neonates received either a placebo or INH-A21 (Veronate), a pooled human immunoglobulin preparation from donors selected on the basis of high antibody titers against staphylococcal S. aureus ClfA and Staphylococcus epidermidis SdrG. There was no difference between the rates of late-onset sepsis caused by S. aureus or coagulase-negative staphylococci in the two groups (5). To date, vaccine trials targeting S. aureus have been performed only with immunocompromised patient populations (hemodialysis patients and premature neonates).
The present study was designed to determine whether antibodies to the S. aureus CPs or ClfA, given separately or together, prevent staphylococcal infection in a mouse model of mastitis. This model represents a well-characterized, sublethal, and localized S. aureus infection that mimics ruminant mastitis due to similarities between mice and cows (30). We also assessed the phenotype of the staphylococci cultured from the passively immunized animals to determine whether antibodies to CP selected in vivo for the emergence of escape mutants of S. aureus that lacked a capsule. Recovery of S. aureus small-colony variants (SCVs) from the infected animals passively immunized with CP antiserum was an unanticipated finding.
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Antibodies to CP5 or CP8 were obtained by immunization of rabbits with killed encapsulated bacteria as described previously (21), followed by absorption of the sera with unencapsulated mutant strains to make them specific for CP5 or CP8. Preimmune rabbit serum was nonreactive as determined by immunodiffusion with bacterial extracts containing CP5 or CP8. Monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) to ClfA (immunoglobulin G1; Aurexis 904-A1 INH-H06048; lot 27E001-4E7042) were kindly provided by Inhibitex Inc. (Alpharetta, GA) (13, 36).
Mouse models. CF1 outbred mice were maintained in the vivarium of the Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina, in accordance with the guidelines of the National Institutes of Health (29). The mouse model of mastitis has been described previously (11, 44). Groups of 8 to 10 mice were passively immunized by the intraperitoneal (i.p.) route with either 0.5 ml of anti-CP5 serum, 0.5 ml of anti-CP8 serum, 0.5 ml of preimmune rabbit serum, or 10 mg/kg of ClfA MAbs. Additional groups of mice received antibodies to both CP5 and ClfA. After 24 h the mice were challenged by injection of 106 CFU S. aureus in 50 µl into the left fourth and right fourth mammary glands. After 4 days the left fourth and right fourth mammary glands were excised from each animal and homogenized separately in 2 ml of tryptic soy broth. Dilutions of the homogenates were plated quantitatively on TSA plates. CP production was evaluated by colony immunoblotting (21) on TSA plates with 30 to 150 S. aureus colonies. Staphylococcal colonies were harvested from duplicate plates and suspended in PBS, and 106 CFU was injected into another group of lactating mice (Fig. 1). This cycle of in vivo passage and bacterial retrieval was repeated up to 16 times. To determine whether the unencapsulated (also known as nontypeable [NT]) (4) S. aureus variants recovered from mice with mastitis reverted to production of CP in the bloodstream, we challenged groups of 6 to 10 mice by the i.p. route with 200 µl of a suspension containing 108 CFU of an NT variant of serotype 5 strain RA9. Mice were euthanized 24 h after challenge, and blood was extracted by cardiac puncture and plated in duplicate on TSA plates. Additional mice were challenged with bacteria recovered from the TSA plate, and this cycle was repeated up to 10 times. The production of capsule by colonies plated from the blood after each cycle was assessed by colony immunoblotting.
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FIG. 1. Experimental regimen consisting of consecutive cycles of passive immunization with rabbit antiserum or MAbs followed by challenge with in vivo-passaged S. aureus. The capsule phenotype of colonies recovered from each infection cycle was assessed by a colony immunoblot method. IP, intraperitoneal.
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2 x 105 to 2.5 x 105 cells/well) were washed four times with sterile PBS, and cell viability was evaluated by trypan blue exclusion. MAC-T cell monolayers were then inoculated with S. aureus strains suspended in fresh growth medium without antibiotics (invasion medium) using a multiplicity of infection of 40. The tissue culture plates were subjected to centrifugation at 1,000 x g for 20 min to deposit S. aureus cells on the monolayer surface. After incubation for 1 h at 37°C under 5% CO2, the wells were washed with PBS, and 1 ml of invasion medium supplemented with 25 µg/ml of lysostaphin (Sigma) was added to each well to kill the extracellular bacteria. After 2 h of incubation at 37°C with 5% CO2, the culture supernatants were collected and plated on TSA. No growth was detected in any cell culture supernatant, indicating that 100% of the extracellular S. aureus cells were lysed by lysostaphin. The monolayer was washed four times with sterile PBS, treated for 5 min at 37°C with 100 µl of 0.25% trypsin-0.1% EDTA (Gibco BRL), and lysed by addition of 900 µl of 0.025% Triton X-100 (USB, Cleveland, OH) in sterile distilled water to release intracellular staphylococci. The numbers of CFU/ml in the cell lysates were determined by plating serial dilutions on TSA plates. Statistical analyses. Quantitative culture data for tissue homogenates were compared by using the Mann-Whitney test for nonparametric data. P values of <0.05 were considered significant. The Prism 4.0 software (GraphPad) was used for all calculations.
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FIG. 2. Passive immunization with CP antibodies reduced the bacterial burden in the mammary glands of lactating mice. Each bar indicates the mean log10 CFU/gland obtained in cycle 1, and the error bars indicate the standard errors of the means (six to eight mice/group). The dotted line indicates the limit of detection (0.7 log CFU/gland). *, significant difference in the number of CFU at 96 h after challenge of mice inoculated with immune or nonimmune serum. The levels of significance were as follows: for CP5-positive strain RA9, P < 0.001; for CP8-positive strain MBC212, P < 0.001; for Reynolds (CP5), P = 0.014; and for Reynolds (CP8), P = 0.001.
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70%) by the eighth cycle. Similarly, NT S. aureus emerged after five or six mouse passages from passively immunized animals challenged with bovine isolate MBC212 (Fig. 3, upper panel) or the isogenic CP5-positive and CP8-positive derivatives of strain Reynolds (Fig. 3, lower panel). With NT derivatives obtained in vivo there was positive PCR amplification for S. aureus-specific sequences. In addition, the SmaI pulsed-field gel electrophoresis band patterns of NT strains recovered from different mice coincided with those of the encapsulated strains inoculated into the mice in the first cycle of the experiment (not shown). NT S. aureus was obtained from mammary gland homogenates of none of the control mice followed for up to 16 passages, and staphylococci were not recovered from the liver, kidneys, spleens, or lungs of mice in either group 4 days after bacterial inoculation. It is noteworthy that the protection afforded by passive immunization with CP-specific antibodies (Fig. 2) was apparent only when most of the S. aureus cells recovered from the infected glands were CP positive (i.e., after fewer than six infection cycles) (Fig. 3). The CP antibody-mediated reduction in the bacterial burden decreased thereafter, and there was no decrease in the number of CFU/gland when all of the S. aureus cells recovered from the glands were NT (data not shown).
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FIG. 3. CP antiserum selects for NT S. aureus in the mammary glands of mice challenged with CP-positive S. aureus. Each symbols indicates the percentage of NT S. aureus variants obtained after a cycle of enrichment. (Upper panel) Strains RA9 (CP5) and MBC212 (CP8). (Lower panel) Strains Reynolds (CP5) and Reynolds (CP8).
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103 CFU S. aureus/ml was recovered from the mouse blood samples. No CP5-positive colonies were detected after the first or second passages. By the third passage, however, 11% of the colonies isolated from the blood expressed CP5. The percentage of CP5-positive S. aureus colonies increased to 25% by the fourth cycle and remained unchanged through the 10th cycle of the experiment. Passive immunization with MAbs to S. aureus ClfA. Additional groups of lactating mice were passively immunized i.p. with MAbs to S. aureus ClfA or with isotype-matched control MAbs. Administration of the ClfA MAbs to mice prior to challenge with bovine strain RA9 (CP5 positive) resulted in a 3-log10 reduction in the tissue bacterial burden compared to that in mice given control MAbs (Fig. 4). Passive immunization with antibodies to both CP5 and ClfA had an additive effect, effectively sterilizing 17 (42%) of 40 mammary glands infected with S. aureus RA9 during experimental cycles 1 through 4. CP5 and ClfA antibody-mediated protection against infection of the mammary glands persisted for up to 10 infection cycles (data not shown). Moreover, NT S. aureus colonies were not recovered from the mammary glands of mice passively immunized with ClfA MAbs alone or in combination with CP5 antibodies for up to 10 infection cycles (Fig. 5).
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FIG. 4. Passive immunization with antibodies to CP5 and ClfA reduced the intramammary bacterial load 96 h after intramammary challenge. Each bar indicates the mean log10 CFU S. aureus/gland, and the error bars indicate the standard errors of the means (six to eight mice/group). The dotted line indicates the limit of detection by culture (0.7 log CFU/gland). *, significant difference in the number of CFU at 96 h after challenge between mice inoculated with immune serum and the corresponding controls. The levels of significance were as follows: for mice passively immunized with ClfA MAbs versus the control, P < 0.01; for mice passively immunized with CP5 antiserum versus the control, P < 0.01; and for mice passively immunized with ClfA MAbs plus CP5 antiserum versus either control group, P < 0.001.
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FIG. 5. Emergence of NT S. aureus in the mammary glands of mice challenged with S. aureus strain RA9 (CP5 positive) did not occur in mice inoculated with ClfA MAbs (with or without CP5 antibodies) up to the 10th experimental cycle. Each symbol indicates the percentage of NT S. aureus colonies obtained after a cycle of enrichment.
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Selection of SCVs by passive immunization with CP-specific antiserum. All of the mammary glands (8 to 10 glands per enrichment cycle) from mice treated with either CP5- or CP8-specific antiserum and inoculated with bovine strain RA9 (CP5 positive) or MBC212 (CP8 positive) yielded SCVs by the sixth enrichment cycle (Fig. 6, left panel). SCVs also emerged in mice challenged with human strain Reynolds (CP5) or Reynolds (CP8) (Fig. 6, right panel) but not from mice given nonimmune serum. Most SCVs obtained in the sixth cycle reverted to a normal colony phenotype after one or two in vitro subcultures, whereas some SCVs recovered after the ninth cycle exhibited a more stable phenotype that did not revert after seven passages. SCVs were detected only after 48 h of incubation at 37°C, and the small colonies showed little pigmentation, hemolysis, or coagulase activity (positive only after 18 h of incubation at 37°C). The CP phenotype was assessed for SCVs that emerged in vivo from mice infected with strains RA9 (n = 78), MBC212 (n = 80), Reynolds (CP5) (n = 93), and Reynolds (CP8) (n = 89); all 340 SCVs were CP positive and exhibited positive PCR amplification of S. aureus-specific sequences. The auxotrophies and genetic lesions responsible for the SCV phenotypes of strains recovered from mice with mastitis were not characterized, but they have been described in previous reports and were summarized in a recent review (34). Only a few SCVs were detected in the mammary glands of mice given both CP5 antibodies and ClfA MAbs, and these SCVs were not apparent until the seventh infection cycle (Fig. 7).
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FIG. 6. Recovery of SCVs from the mammary glands of passively immunized mice during the enrichment experiment. The SCVs were isolated from mice treated with CP antibodies and challenged with bovine isolate RA9 or MBC212 (left panel) or human isogenic strain Reynolds (CP5) or Reynolds (CP8) (right panel). SCVs were recovered from the majority of mice inoculated with the bovine RA9 or MBC212 strain but from only one-half of the mice challenged with Reynolds (CP5) or Reynolds (CP8). SCVs were not detected in tissues from mice inoculated with nonimmune rabbit serum.
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FIG. 7. Passive immunization with CP5 antiserum, as shown in Fig. 1, resulted in emergence of S. aureus SCVs. Injection of ClfA MAbs plus CP5 antiserum significantly (P < 0.001) reduced the emergence of S. aureus SCVs in the mammary glands of mice challenged with S. aureus strain RA9 (CP5 positive) up to the 10th infection cycle. Passive immunization with ClfA MAbs prevented the emergence of S. aureus SCVs. Each symbol indicates the percentage of S. aureus SCV derivatives obtained for a cycle(s) of enrichment.
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Our results also provide evidence that antibodies specific to CP5 or CP8 promoted selection and emergence of NT S. aureus in vivo. Although several mechanisms can explain the loss of CP expression by S. aureus, point mutations in essential cap5 and cap8 genes are most prevalent in NT human and bovine isolates (4, 41, 45). Alternatively, loss of CP expression by S. aureus in mice passively immunized with antibodies to CP5 or CP8 may result from mutations in regulatory genes like agr or arlRS. Most of the NT derivatives obtained in our study were hemolytic, suggesting that they were not agr mutants. In the absence of the selective pressure provided by antibodies to CP, the CP5-positive phenotype was restored in the bloodstream of nonimmune mice challenged with the experimental NT variants.
Thakker et al. (43) demonstrated the critical role played by CP in staphylococcal bloodstream infection since CP5-positive S. aureus resulted in a higher level of mouse bacteremia than unencapsulated mutants. In contrast, CP5 and CP8 attenuated virulence in a mouse model of staphylococcal mastitis and reduced internalization by bovine mammary epithelial cells in vitro (2, 44). Thus, S. aureus readily adapts to its microenvironment; CP-expressing bacterial cells survive in the bloodstream, whereas unencapsulated variants adhere, invade, and selectively persist within infected tissues. Our findings suggest that antibodies to CP5 and CP8 may enhance the clearance of encapsulated S. aureus from infected mice but, at the same time, select for a bacterial subpopulation (unencapsulated) that can be internalized within epithelial cells, thereby avoiding further immune clearance.
S. aureus SCVs have been implicated in chronic and persistent staphylococcal infections (1) and in S. aureus intracellular survival (9, 40, 47). Our study demonstrated that selective pressure exerted in vivo by antibodies to CP5 and CP8 led to the emergence of NT variants and SCVs. Whereas it is logical that NT "escape mutants" might emerge in the presence of antibodies to CP5 or CP8, it is not apparent how administration of these antibodies resulted in the emergence in vivo of SCVs. It is possible that NT variants of S. aureus were internalized within epithelial cells and that this facilitated evolution of SCVs in the intracellular milieu. However, our SCVs expressed CP5, consistent with previous investigations that showed that there was upregulation of capsule genes in S. aureus SCVs (37). The emergence of stable NT S. aureus variants and the emergence of SCVs in our mouse infection model seemed to be independent phenomena, since such variants were isolated simultaneously from the infected glands of lactating mice. The environmental factors that trigger SCV formation are poorly understood. It is possible that downregulation of CP expression in vivo may generate unstable NT phenotypes that are internalized within epithelial cells. Once in the intracellular milieu, the NT S. aureus variants may evolve into SCVs and regain CP expression. This scenario might explain the concomitant emergence of stable NT S. aureus variants and CP-positive SCVs in our mastitis infection model.
We conclude that a vaccine formulation comprising CP conjugates plus a surface-associated protein adhesin may be more effective than either antigen alone for prevention of S. aureus infections. We showed that antibodies to ClfA enhanced the protection against infection provided by antibodies to the CPs. Furthermore, administration of antibodies to CP and ClfA abrogated the emergence of NT S. aureus and decreased the recovery of SCVs from the infected mouse tissues. Whether this combination of antibodies protects against other types of staphylococcal infections merits further investigation.
We thank Joseph M. Patti, Inhibitex, Inc., Alpharetta, GA, for providing ClfA MAbs (Aurexis). We also thank Lorena Medina for her dedicated technical assistance and Sabrina Soldavini for her assistance with animal experiments.
Published ahead of print on 22 September 2008. ![]()
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