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Infect. Immun., 04 1997, 1445-1454, Vol 65, No. 4
E Harokopakis, G Hajishengallis, TE Greenway, MW Russell and SM Michalek
An avirulent Salmonella typhimurium vaccine strain expressing a
streptococcal protein adhesin and a similar clone which produces the same
streptococcal antigen linked to the cholera toxin (CT) A2 and B subunits
(CTA2/B) were compared for the ability to induce antibody responses to the
expressed heterologous antigen after oral or intranasal immunization of
mice. Expression of cloned immunogens in these systems is temperature
regulated, being optimal at 37 degrees C, and the two clones under
comparison were shown to produce similar levels of the streptococcal
antigen. Both clones were found to stimulate high levels of serum
immunoglobulin G (IgG) and mucosal IgA antibodies to the cloned immunogen.
A consistent trend was observed toward higher mucosal IgA but lower serum
IgG responses in the case of the S. typhimurium vector that coexpressed
CTA2/B, a potential mucosal adjuvant, regardless of the route of
administration. Also noteworthy was the capacity of these antigen delivery
systems to induce anamnestic systemic and secretory responses to the cloned
immunogen 15 weeks after the primary immunization, despite preexisting
immunity to the Salmonella vectors. These antibody responses were sustained
for at least 7 months following the booster immunization, at which time the
secretory IgA antibody levels were significantly higher in mice given the
Salmonella clone that coexpressed CTA2/B. Although the serum IgG response
against the Salmonella vector was characterized by a high IgG2a/IgG1 ratio
(indicative of the T helper type 1 [Th1]/Th2 profile), a mixed IgG1 and
IgG2a pattern was observed for the carried heterologous antigen, which
displayed a dominant IgG1 response when administered as a purified
immunogen. Our findings indicate that the recombinant streptococcal antigen
and CTA2/B are strong immunogens when expressed by the antigen delivery
system used in this study and suggest that CTA2/B may have an additional
immunoenhancing activity in the mucosal compartment besides its ability to
target antigen uptake into the mucosal inductive sites. CTA2/B may thus be
useful as an S. typhimurium-cloned adjuvant for coexpressed protein
antigens.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Mucosal immunogenicity of a recombinant Salmonella typhimurium-cloned heterologous antigen in the absence or presence of coexpressed cholera toxin A2 and B subunits
Department of Microbiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 35294, USA.
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