Immunobiology, UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health Biomedical Research Centre, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1EH, United Kingdom.
Department of Molecular Medicine & Pathology, School of Medical Sciences, The University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand.
Vaccine. 2018 Jun 18;36(26):3756-3763. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2018.05.056.
Group A Streptococcus (GAS) or Streptococcus pyogenes is responsible for an estimated 500,000 deaths worldwide each year. Protection against GAS infection is thought to be mediated by phagocytosis, enhanced by bacteria-specific antibody. There are no licenced GAS vaccines, despite many promising candidates in preclinical and early stage clinical development, the most advanced of which are based on the GAS M-protein. Vaccine progress has been hindered, in part, by the lack of a standardised functional assay suitable for vaccine evaluation. Current assays, developed over 50 years ago, rely on non-immune human whole blood as a source of neutrophils and complement. Variations in complement and neutrophil activity between donors result in variable data that is difficult to interpret. We have developed an opsonophagocytic killing assay (OPKA) for GAS that utilises dimethylformamide (DMF)-differentiated human promyelocytic leukemia cells (HL-60) as a source of neutrophils and baby rabbit complement, thus removing the major sources of variation in current assays. We have standardised the OPKA for several clinically relevant GAS strain types (emm1, emm6 and emm12) and have shown antibody-specific killing for each emm-type using M-protein specific rabbit antisera. Specificity was demonstrated by pre-incubation of the antisera with homologous M-protein antigens that blocked antibody-specific killing. Additional qualifications of the GAS OPKA, including the assessment of the accuracy, precision, linearity and the lower limit of quantification, were also performed. This GAS OPKA assay has the potential to provide a robust and reproducible platform to accelerate GAS vaccine development.
A 组链球菌(GAS)或化脓性链球菌每年在全球造成约 50 万人死亡。人们认为针对 GAS 感染的保护是通过吞噬作用介导的,并通过细菌特异性抗体增强。尽管有许多有前途的候选疫苗处于临床前和早期临床开发阶段,但仍没有获得许可的 GAS 疫苗,其中最先进的疫苗是基于 GAS M 蛋白。疫苗的进展受到阻碍,部分原因是缺乏适合疫苗评估的标准化功能测定。目前的测定方法是在 50 多年前开发的,依赖于非免疫的人类全血作为中性粒细胞和补体的来源。供体之间补体和中性粒细胞活性的差异导致数据难以解释,且存在可变。我们已经开发了一种针对 GAS 的调理吞噬杀伤测定法(OPKA),该测定法利用二甲基甲酰胺(DMF)分化的人早幼粒细胞白血病细胞(HL-60)作为中性粒细胞的来源,并利用幼兔补体,从而消除了当前测定方法中的主要变异性。我们已经针对几种临床相关的 GAS 菌株类型(emm1、emm6 和 emm12)对 OPKA 进行了标准化,并使用 M 蛋白特异性兔抗血清对每种 emm 型显示了抗体特异性杀伤。特异性是通过将抗血清与同源 M 蛋白抗原预孵育来证明的,该抗原阻断了抗体特异性杀伤。还对 GAS OPKA 进行了其他资格评定,包括准确性、精密度、线性和定量下限的评估。这种 GAS OPKA 测定法有可能为加速 GAS 疫苗的开发提供一个强大且可重复的平台。