Su H, Messer R, Whitmire W, Hughes S, Caldwell H D
Laboratory of Intracellular Parasites, Rocky Mountain Laboratory, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, Montana 59840, USA.
Infect Immun. 2000 Jan;68(1):192-6. doi: 10.1128/IAI.68.1.192-196.2000.
Chlamydia trachomatis is a major cause of sexually transmitted disease (STD) for which a vaccine is needed. CD4(+) T-helper type 1 (Th1) cell-mediated immunity is an important component of protective immunity against murine chlamydial genital infection. Conventional vaccine approaches have not proven effective in eliciting chlamydial-specific CD4 Th1 immunity at the genital mucosa. Thus, it is possible that the development of a highly efficacious vaccine against genital infection will depend on the generation of a live attenuated C. trachomatis vaccine. Attenuated strains of C. trachomatis do not exist, so their potential utility as vaccines cannot be tested in animal models of infection. We have developed a surrogate model to study the effect of chlamydial attenuation on infection and immunity of the female genital tract by treating mice with a subchlamydiacidal concentration of oxytetracycline following vaginal infection. Compared to untreated control mice, antibiotic-treated mice shed significantly fewer infectious organisms (3 log(10)) from the cervico-vagina, produced a minimal inflammatory response in urogenital tissue, and did not experience infection-related sequelae. Antibiotic-treated mice generated levels of chlamydia-specific antibody and cell-mediated immunity equivalent to those of control mice. Importantly, antibiotic-treated mice were found to be as immune as control untreated mice when rechallenged vaginally. These findings demonstrate that subclinical chlamydial infection of the murine female genital tract is sufficient to stimulate a potent protective immune response. They also present indirect evidence supporting the possible use of live attenuated chlamydial organisms in the development of vaccines against chlamydial STDs.
沙眼衣原体是一种需要疫苗来预防的主要性传播疾病(STD)病原体。CD4(+) 1型辅助性T细胞(Th1)介导的免疫是针对小鼠衣原体性生殖道感染的保护性免疫的重要组成部分。传统的疫苗方法在引发生殖道黏膜衣原体特异性CD4 Th1免疫方面尚未被证明有效。因此,一种高效的抗生殖道感染疫苗的开发可能依赖于减毒活沙眼衣原体疫苗的研制。目前不存在沙眼衣原体减毒株,所以它们作为疫苗的潜在效用无法在感染动物模型中进行测试。我们已经开发了一种替代模型,通过在阴道感染后用低于衣原体杀菌浓度的土霉素处理小鼠,来研究衣原体减毒对雌性生殖道感染和免疫的影响。与未处理的对照小鼠相比,经抗生素处理的小鼠宫颈 - 阴道排出的感染性生物体显著减少(3个对数单位),泌尿生殖组织中的炎症反应最小,并且没有经历与感染相关的后遗症。经抗生素处理的小鼠产生的衣原体特异性抗体水平和细胞介导免疫水平与对照小鼠相当。重要的是,当再次经阴道攻击时,发现经抗生素处理的小鼠与未处理的对照小鼠一样具有免疫力。这些发现表明,小鼠雌性生殖道的亚临床衣原体感染足以刺激强烈的保护性免疫反应。它们还提供了间接证据,支持减毒活衣原体生物体在抗衣原体性传播疾病疫苗开发中的可能应用。