Okwor Ifeoma, Liu Dong, Beverley Stephen M, Uzonna Jude E
Parasite Vaccines Development Laboratory, Department of Immunology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, R3E 0T5, Canada.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2009 Aug 18;106(33):13951-6. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0905184106. Epub 2009 Aug 6.
Recovery from natural or experimental Leishmania major infection, the causative agent of cutaneous leishmaniasis, results in development of durable immunity in mice and humans that is manifested as rapid control of parasite replication and resolution of cutaneous lesion after secondary challenge. This form of "infection-induced" immunity is thought to occur naturally in endemic areas and is generally considered the gold standard for any effective vaccine against cutaneous leishmaniasis. To determine factors that might heighten or abrogate infection-induced immunity, we investigated the impact of inoculating dead antigen in the form of killed Leishmania parasites to healed mice. We show that inoculation of killed parasites into mice that resolved their primary virulent L. major infection results in rapid and relatively sustained loss of infection-induced immunity. This loss of immunity was not due to the inability of killed parasites to induce inflammatory responses (such as delayed type hypersensitivity), but it was related to their failure to induce robust IFN-gamma response. Furthermore, inoculation of killed Leishmania parasites into healed mice led to rapid expansion of IL-10-producing CD4(+)CD25(+)Foxp3(+) T cells in lymph nodes draining the primary infection site. Treatment with anti-CD25 or anti-IL-10R mAb abolished killed parasite-induced loss of immunity. Our study suggests that vaccination with killed parasites could predispose naturally immune individuals to become susceptible to new infections and/or disease reactivation. This may account for the lack of efficacy of such vaccines in field trials in endemic regions. These findings have important implications for vaccine design and vaccination strategies against human cutaneous leishmaniasis.
从自然感染或实验性感染硕大利什曼原虫(皮肤利什曼病的病原体)中恢复后,小鼠和人类会产生持久免疫力,表现为再次感染时能迅速控制寄生虫复制并使皮肤损伤消退。这种“感染诱导”的免疫形式被认为在流行地区自然发生,通常被视为任何有效抗皮肤利什曼病疫苗的金标准。为了确定可能增强或消除感染诱导免疫的因素,我们研究了以杀死的利什曼原虫形式接种死抗原对已治愈小鼠的影响。我们发现,向已解决原发性强毒硕大利什曼原虫感染的小鼠接种杀死的寄生虫,会导致感染诱导免疫迅速且相对持续丧失。这种免疫丧失并非由于死寄生虫无法诱导炎症反应(如迟发型超敏反应),而是与其未能诱导强烈的干扰素-γ反应有关。此外,向已治愈小鼠接种杀死的利什曼原虫会导致在原发性感染部位引流淋巴结中产生白细胞介素-10的CD4(+)CD25(+)Foxp3(+) T细胞迅速扩增。用抗CD25或抗白细胞介素-10受体单克隆抗体治疗可消除死寄生虫诱导的免疫丧失。我们的研究表明,用死寄生虫进行疫苗接种可能会使自然免疫个体易患新感染和/或疾病再激活。这可能解释了此类疫苗在流行地区现场试验中缺乏疗效的原因。这些发现对针对人类皮肤利什曼病的疫苗设计和接种策略具有重要意义。