Yang Zhiyong, Ramsey Jeremy, Hamza Therwa, Zhang Yongrong, Li Shan, Yfantis Harris G, Lee Dong, Hernandez Lorraine D, Seghezzi Wolfgang, Furneisen Jamie M, Davis Nicole M, Therien Alex G, Feng Hanping
Department of Microbial Pathogenesis, University of Maryland Dental School, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, VAMHCS, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Infect Immun. 2015 Feb;83(2):822-31. doi: 10.1128/IAI.02897-14. Epub 2014 Dec 8.
Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) represents the most prevalent cause of antibiotic-associated gastrointestinal infections in health care facilities in the developed world. Disease symptoms are caused by the two homologous exotoxins, TcdA and TcdB. Standard therapy for CDI involves administration of antibiotics that are associated with a high rate of disease recurrence, highlighting the need for novel treatment paradigms that target the toxins rather than the organism itself. A combination of human monoclonal antibodies, actoxumab and bezlotoxumab, directed against TcdA and TcdB, respectively, has been shown to decrease the rate of recurrence in patients treated with standard-of-care antibiotics. However, the exact mechanism of antibody-mediated protection is poorly understood. In this study, we show that the antitoxin antibodies are protective in multiple murine models of CDI, including systemic and local (gut) toxin challenge models, as well as primary and recurrent models of infection in mice. Systemically administered actoxumab-bezlotoxumab prevents both the damage to the gut wall and the inflammatory response, which are associated with C. difficile in these models, including in mice challenged with a strain of the hypervirulent ribotype 027. Furthermore, mutant antibodies (N297Q) that do not bind to Fcγ receptors provide a level of protection similar to that of wild-type antibodies, demonstrating that the mechanism of protection is through direct neutralization of the toxins and does not involve host effector functions. These data provide a mechanistic basis for the prevention of recurrent disease observed in CDI patients in clinical trials.
艰难梭菌感染(CDI)是发达国家医疗机构中抗生素相关性胃肠道感染最常见的病因。疾病症状由两种同源外毒素TcdA和TcdB引起。CDI的标准治疗包括使用与高疾病复发率相关的抗生素,这凸显了针对毒素而非病原体本身的新型治疗模式的必要性。分别针对TcdA和TcdB的人源单克隆抗体actoxumab和bezlotoxumab联合使用,已显示可降低接受标准护理抗生素治疗的患者的复发率。然而,抗体介导的保护的确切机制尚不清楚。在本研究中,我们表明抗毒素抗体在多种CDI小鼠模型中具有保护作用,包括全身和局部(肠道)毒素攻击模型,以及小鼠原发性和复发性感染模型。全身给药的actoxumab-bezlotoxumab可预防肠壁损伤和炎症反应,在这些模型中,这些反应与艰难梭菌有关,包括在用高毒力核糖体分型027菌株攻击的小鼠中。此外,不与Fcγ受体结合的突变抗体(N297Q)提供了与野生型抗体相似的保护水平,表明保护机制是通过直接中和毒素,而不涉及宿主效应功能。这些数据为临床试验中CDI患者复发性疾病的预防提供了机制基础。