Coppola Mariateresa, van den Eeden Susan J F, Wilson Louis, Franken Kees L M C, Ottenhoff Tom H M, Geluk Annemieke
Department of Infectious Diseases, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Department of Infectious Diseases, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands
Clin Vaccine Immunol. 2015 Sep;22(9):1060-9. doi: 10.1128/CVI.00271-15. Epub 2015 Jul 22.
Responsible for 9 million new cases of active disease and nearly 2 million deaths each year, tuberculosis (TB) remains a global health threat of overwhelming dimensions. Mycobacterium bovis BCG, the only licensed vaccine available, fails to confer lifelong protection and to prevent reactivation of latent infection. Although 15 new vaccine candidates are now in clinical trials, an effective vaccine against TB remains elusive, and new strategies for vaccination are vital. BCG vaccination fails to induce immunity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis latency antigens. Synthetic long peptides (SLPs) combined with adjuvants have been studied mostly for therapeutic cancer vaccines, yet not for TB, and proved to induce efficient antitumor immunity. This study investigated an SLP derived from Rv1733c, a major M. tuberculosis latency antigen which is highly expressed by "dormant" M. tuberculosis and well recognized by T cells from latently M. tuberculosis-infected individuals. In order to assess its in vivo immunogenicity and protective capacity, Rv1733c SLP in CpG was administered to HLA-DR3 transgenic mice. Immunization with Rv1733c SLP elicited gamma interferon-positive/tumor necrosis factor-positive (IFN-γ(+)/TNF(+)) and IFN-γ(+) CD4(+) T cells and Rv1733c-specific antibodies and led to a significant reduction in the bacterial load in the lungs of M. tuberculosis-challenged mice. This was observed both in a pre- and in a post-M. tuberculosis challenge setting. Moreover, Rv1733c SLP immunization significantly boosted the protective efficacy of BCG, demonstrating the potential of M. tuberculosis latency antigens to improve BCG efficacy. These data suggest a promising role for M. tuberculosis latency antigen Rv1733c-derived SLPs as a novel TB vaccine approach, both in a prophylactic and in a postinfection setting.
结核病每年导致900万新的活动性病例和近200万人死亡,仍然是一个规模巨大的全球健康威胁。唯一获得许可的疫苗卡介苗无法提供终身保护,也无法预防潜伏感染的重新激活。尽管目前有15种新的疫苗候选物正在进行临床试验,但一种有效的抗结核疫苗仍然难以捉摸,新的疫苗接种策略至关重要。卡介苗接种无法诱导针对结核分枝杆菌潜伏抗原的免疫。合成长肽(SLP)与佐剂联合主要用于治疗性癌症疫苗研究,而非用于结核病研究,并且已证明可诱导有效的抗肿瘤免疫。本研究调查了一种源自Rv1733c的SLP,Rv1733c是一种主要的结核分枝杆菌潜伏抗原,由“休眠”的结核分枝杆菌高度表达,并被潜伏感染结核分枝杆菌个体的T细胞很好地识别。为了评估其体内免疫原性和保护能力,将含CpG的Rv1733c SLP给予HLA - DR3转基因小鼠。用Rv1733c SLP免疫引发了γ干扰素阳性/肿瘤坏死因子阳性(IFN - γ(+)/TNF(+))和IFN - γ(+) CD4(+) T细胞以及Rv1733c特异性抗体,并导致结核分枝杆菌攻击的小鼠肺部细菌载量显著降低。这在结核分枝杆菌攻击前和攻击后环境中均观察到。此外,Rv1733c SLP免疫显著提高了卡介苗的保护效力,证明了结核分枝杆菌潜伏抗原在提高卡介苗效力方面的潜力。这些数据表明,结核分枝杆菌潜伏抗原Rv1733c衍生的SLP在预防和感染后环境中作为一种新型结核病疫苗方法具有广阔前景。