Vector Molecular Biology Unit, Laboratory of Malaria and Vector Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Rockville, Maryland, USA.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2008 Apr 16;2(4):e226. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0000226.
Leishmania parasites are transmitted in the presence of sand fly saliva. Together with the parasite, the sand fly injects biologically active salivary components that favorably change the environment at the feeding site. Exposure to bites or to salivary proteins results in immunity specific to these components. Mice immunized with Phlebotomus papatasi salivary gland homogenate (SGH) or pre-exposed to uninfected bites were protected against Leishmania major infection delivered by needle inoculation with SGH or by infected sand fly bites. Immunization with individual salivary proteins of two sand fly species protected mice from L. major infection. Here, we analyze the immune response to distinct salivary proteins from P. papatasi that produced contrasting outcomes of L. major infection.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: DNA immunization with distinct DTH-inducing salivary proteins from P. papatasi modulates L. major infection. PpSP15-immunized mice (PpSP15-mice) show lasting protection while PpSP44-immunized mice (PpSP44-mice) aggravate the infection, suggesting that immunization with these distinct molecules alters the course of anti-Leishmania immunity. Two weeks post-infection, 31.5% of CD4(+) T cells produced IFN-gamma in PpSP15-mice compared to 7.1% in PpSP44-mice. Moreover, IL-4-producing cells were 3-fold higher in PpSP44-mice. At an earlier time point of two hours after challenge with SGH and L. major, the expression profile of PpSP15-mice showed over 3-fold higher IFN-gamma and IL-12-Rbeta2 and 20-fold lower IL-4 expression relative to PpSP44-mice, suggesting that salivary proteins differentially prime anti-Leishmania immunity. This immune response is inducible by sand fly bites where PpSP15-mice showed a 3-fold higher IFN-gamma and a 5-fold lower IL-4 expression compared with PpSP44-mice.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Immunization with two salivary proteins from P. papatasi, PpSP15 and PpSP44, produced distinct immune profiles that correlated with resistance or susceptibility to Leishmania infection. The demonstration for the first time that immunity to a defined salivary protein (PpSP44) results in disease enhancement stresses the importance of the proper selection of vector-based vaccine candidates.
利什曼原虫寄生虫在沙蝇唾液存在的情况下传播。沙蝇与寄生虫一起注入生物活性唾液成分,这些成分有利地改变了进食部位的环境。暴露于叮咬或唾液蛋白会导致针对这些成分的特异性免疫。用埃及伊蚊唾液腺匀浆(SGH)免疫或预先暴露于未感染的叮咬的小鼠,可通过 SGH 或感染的沙蝇叮咬的针接种预防大流行性利什曼原虫感染。用两种沙蝇物种的单个唾液蛋白免疫可保护小鼠免受大流行性利什曼原虫感染。在这里,我们分析了来自埃及伊蚊的不同唾液蛋白的免疫反应,这些蛋白产生了大流行性利什曼原虫感染的截然不同的结果。
方法/主要发现:用埃及伊蚊的不同 DTH 诱导性唾液蛋白进行 DNA 免疫可调节大流行性利什曼原虫感染。用 PpSP15 免疫的小鼠(PpSP15-小鼠)表现出持久的保护作用,而用 PpSP44 免疫的小鼠(PpSP44-小鼠)则加重了感染,表明用这些不同的分子免疫会改变抗利什曼原虫免疫的过程。感染后 2 周,31.5%的 CD4(+)T 细胞产生 IFN-γ,而 PpSP44-小鼠中只有 7.1%。此外,PpSP44-小鼠中产生 IL-4 的细胞增加了 3 倍。在 SGH 和大流行性利什曼原虫攻击后 2 小时的较早时间点,PpSP15-小鼠的表达谱显示 IFN-γ和 IL-12-Rβ2的表达增加了 3 倍,IL-4 的表达降低了 20 倍,表明唾液蛋白可差异地引发抗利什曼原虫免疫。这种免疫反应可由沙蝇叮咬诱导,其中 PpSP15-小鼠的 IFN-γ和 IL-4 的表达分别比 PpSP44-小鼠高 3 倍和 5 倍。
结论/意义:用埃及伊蚊的两种唾液蛋白 PpSP15 和 PpSP44 免疫产生了不同的免疫谱,与对利什曼原虫感染的抗性或易感性相关。首次证明针对一种定义明确的唾液蛋白(PpSP44)的免疫会导致疾病加重,这强调了正确选择基于载体的疫苗候选物的重要性。