Skowera Anna, de Jong Esther C, Schuitemaker Joost H N, Allen Jennifer S, Wessely Simon C, Griffiths Gareth, Kapsenberg Martien, Peakman Mark
Department of Immunobiology, King's College London, School of Medicine, Guy's Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
J Immunol. 2005 Dec 1;175(11):7235-43. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.175.11.7235.
The anti-biowarfare anthrax and plague vaccines require repeated dosing to achieve adequate protection. To test the hypothesis that this limited immunogenicity results from the nature of vaccine interactions with the host innate immune system, we investigated molecular and cellular interactions between vaccines, dendritic cells (DCs), and T cells and explored the potential for adjuvants (pertussis) to boost induction of host immunity. Human monocyte-derived DCs were matured in the presence of vaccines and analyzed for their ability to induce Th1/Th2 development from naive T cells, expression of cell surface maturation/costimulation molecules, and cytokine production. The vaccines showed different behavior patterns. Although the plague vaccine is equivalent to control maturation factors in maturation and stimulation of DCs and induces strong MLR and Th outgrowth, the anthrax vaccine is a poor inducer of DC maturation, as indicated by low levels of HLA-DR, CD86, and CD83 induction and minimal proinflammatory cytokine production. Interestingly, however, anthrax vaccine-treated DCs stimulate Th1 and Th2 outgrowth and a limited MLR response. There was no sustained negative modulatory effects of the anthrax vaccine on DCs, and its limited stimulatory effects could be overridden by coculture with pertussis. These results were supported by analysis of anthrax vaccine recall responses in subjects vaccinated using pertussis as an adjuvant, who demonstrate anthrax-specific effector T cell responses. These data show that the anthrax vaccine is a suboptimal DC stimulus that may in part explain the observation that it requires repeated administration in vivo and offer a rational basis for the use of complementary DC-maturing adjuvants in combined immunotherapy.
抗生物战炭疽和鼠疫疫苗需要重复给药才能获得足够的保护。为了验证这种有限的免疫原性是由疫苗与宿主先天免疫系统相互作用的性质导致的这一假设,我们研究了疫苗、树突状细胞(DCs)和T细胞之间的分子和细胞相互作用,并探索了佐剂(百日咳)增强宿主免疫诱导的潜力。在疫苗存在的情况下使源自人单核细胞的DCs成熟,并分析它们从初始T细胞诱导Th1/Th2发育的能力、细胞表面成熟/共刺激分子的表达以及细胞因子的产生。疫苗表现出不同的行为模式。尽管鼠疫疫苗在DCs的成熟和刺激方面等同于对照成熟因子,并能诱导强烈的混合淋巴细胞反应(MLR)和Th细胞增殖,但炭疽疫苗对DC成熟的诱导作用较差,表现为HLA-DR、CD86和CD83诱导水平较低以及促炎细胞因子产生极少。然而,有趣的是,经炭疽疫苗处理的DCs能刺激Th1和Th2细胞增殖以及有限的MLR反应。炭疽疫苗对DCs没有持续的负调节作用,并且其有限的刺激作用可以通过与百日咳共培养来克服。对以百日咳作为佐剂接种疫苗的受试者的炭疽疫苗回忆反应分析支持了这些结果,这些受试者表现出炭疽特异性效应T细胞反应。这些数据表明,炭疽疫苗是一种次优的DC刺激物,这可能部分解释了其在体内需要重复给药的现象,并为在联合免疫治疗中使用互补的DC成熟佐剂提供了合理依据。