Saint Louis University, Division of Infectious Diseases, Allergy, and Immunology, Department of Internal Medicine, Saint Louis, MO, United States.
Washington University, School of Medicine, Saint Louis, MO, United States.
Vaccine. 2019 Aug 23;37(36):5364-5370. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2019.07.034. Epub 2019 Jul 19.
Tuberculosis (TB) remains a tremendous global health problem, with 1/4 of the world's population infected and causing > 1 million deaths annually. Intradermal Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine given during infancy protects against severe forms of acute disease but does not prevent chronic infection or development of pulmonary TB. TB vaccine mucosal targeting potentially could induce mucosal resident immune cells with increased protective capacity against pulmonary infection and disease. Sublingual (SL) administration of vaccines may be an optimal mucosal delivery platform based on the high absorptive capacity of this mucosal surface, the extensive lymphoid tissue, and published preclinical studies demonstrating efficacy of SL vaccination against other pathogens. To this end, we performed preliminary testing of sublingual TB vaccines. Vaccination of mice with SL BCG elicited potent mycobacteria-specific T cell responses which persisted 16 weeks post-immunization. The magnitudes of the T cell responses were similarly induced after sublingual, intranasal, and subcutaneous BCG vaccination. Interestingly, serum mycobacteria-specific antibody responses and systemic recovery of BCG post-vaccination were lower after SL BCG compared with systemic BCG immunization. However, more importantly, SL BCG vaccinated mice were significantly protected against an aerosolized virulent M. tuberculosis challenge (P < 0.0001 compared to unvaccinated mice). Furthermore, this protection was long-lived, persisting for 16 weeks with >1 log CFU reduction compared with naïve challenged mice in both lungs and spleens (P < 0.0001 and P < 0.0028, respectively). These exciting results provide strong support for further studies exploring the mechanisms of protective immunity induced by sublingual BCG vaccination.
结核病(TB)仍然是一个巨大的全球健康问题,世界上有四分之一的人口感染了这种疾病,每年导致超过 100 万人死亡。婴儿时期接种的皮内卡介苗(BCG)疫苗可以预防严重的急性疾病,但不能预防慢性感染或发展为肺结核。TB 疫苗粘膜靶向可能会诱导粘膜固有免疫细胞,增加对肺感染和疾病的保护能力。基于该粘膜表面的高吸收能力、广泛的淋巴组织以及已发表的临床前研究证明了 SL 疫苗接种对其他病原体的有效性,舌下(SL)疫苗接种可能是一种最佳的粘膜传递平台。为此,我们对 SL TB 疫苗进行了初步测试。SL BCG 疫苗接种可引起强烈的分枝杆菌特异性 T 细胞反应,该反应在免疫后 16 周仍持续存在。经 SL、鼻内和皮下 BCG 疫苗接种后,T 细胞反应的幅度也相似。有趣的是,与全身 BCG 免疫相比,SL BCG 接种后的血清分枝杆菌特异性抗体反应和全身 BCG 恢复较低。然而,更重要的是,SL BCG 接种的小鼠对雾化的强毒结核分枝杆菌(M. tuberculosis)挑战具有显著的保护作用(与未接种疫苗的小鼠相比,P < 0.0001)。此外,这种保护作用持久,与未受挑战的对照小鼠相比,在肺部和脾脏中分别持续 16 周,CFU 减少>1 对数(P < 0.0001 和 P < 0.0028)。这些令人兴奋的结果为进一步研究 SL BCG 疫苗接种诱导的保护性免疫机制提供了强有力的支持。