Plague Unit, Institut Pasteur de Madagascar, 101, Antananarivo, Madagascar.
Central Laboratory for Plague, Ministry of Public Health, 101, Antananarivo, Madagascar.
BMC Infect Dis. 2020 Nov 10;20(1):822. doi: 10.1186/s12879-020-05565-8.
Plague, a fatal disease caused by the bacillus, Yersinia pestis, still affects resources-limited countries. Information on antibody response to plague infection in human is scarce. Anti-F1 Ig G are among the known protective antibodies against Y. pestis infection. As a vaccine preventable disease, knowledge on antibody response is valuable for the development of an effective vaccine to reduce infection rate among exposed population in plague-endemic regions. In this study, we aim to describe short and long-term humoral immune responses against Y. pestis in plague-confirmed patients from Madagascar, the most affected country in the world.
Bubonic (BP) and pneumonic plague (PP) patients were recruited from plague- endemic foci in the central highlands of Madagascar between 2005 and 2017. For short-term follow-up, 6 suspected patients were enrolled and prospectively investigated for kinetics of the anti-F1 IgG response, whereas the persistence of antibodies was retrospectively studied in 71 confirmed convalescent patients, using an ELISA which was validated for the detection of plague in human blood samples in Madagascar.
Similarly to previous findings, anti-F1 IgG rose quickly during the first week after disease onset and increased up to day 30. In the long-term study, 56% of confirmed cases remained seropositive, amongst which 60 and 40% could be considered as high- and low-antibody responders, respectively. Antibodies persisted for several years and up to 14.8 years for one individual. Antibody titers decreased over time but there was no correlation between titer and time elapsed between the disease onset and serum sampling. In addition, the seroprevalence rate was not significantly different between gender (P = 0.65) nor age (P = 0.096).
Our study highlighted that the circulating antibody response to F1 antigen, which is specific to Y. pestis, may be attributable to individual immune responsiveness. The finding that a circulating anti-F1 antibody titer could persist for more than a decade in both BP and PP recovered patients, suggests its probable involvement in patients' protection. However, complementary studies including analyses of the cellular immune response to Y. pestis are required for the better understanding of long-lasting protection and development of a potential vaccine against plague.
鼠疫是由鼠疫杆菌(Yersinia pestis)引起的致命疾病,仍然影响着资源有限的国家。关于人类感染鼠疫后的抗体反应信息很少。抗 F1 IgG 是针对 Y. pestis 感染的已知保护性抗体之一。作为一种可通过疫苗预防的疾病,了解抗体反应对于开发有效疫苗以降低鼠疫流行地区暴露人群的感染率具有重要意义。在这项研究中,我们旨在描述马达加斯加鼠疫确诊患者的短期和长期针对 Y. pestis 的体液免疫反应,马达加斯加是世界上受鼠疫影响最严重的国家。
在 2005 年至 2017 年间,从马达加斯加中央高地的鼠疫流行地区招募了腹股沟鼠疫(BP)和肺鼠疫(PP)患者。为了进行短期随访,我们纳入了 6 名疑似患者,并前瞻性地研究了抗 F1 IgG 反应的动力学,而 71 名确诊恢复期患者的抗体持久性则通过酶联免疫吸附试验(ELISA)进行了回顾性研究,该试验已在马达加斯加用于检测人类血液样本中的鼠疫。
与之前的研究结果相似,抗 F1 IgG 在疾病发作后的第一周迅速升高,并在第 30 天增加。在长期研究中,56%的确诊病例仍呈血清阳性,其中 60%和 40%分别可被认为是高抗体和低抗体应答者。抗体可在数年内持续存在,并且在一个个体中可长达 14.8 年。抗体滴度随时间而降低,但在疾病发作和血清采样之间的时间流逝与滴度之间没有相关性。此外,血清阳性率在性别(P=0.65)或年龄(P=0.096)之间没有显著差异。
我们的研究强调了针对 Y. pestis 的 F1 抗原的循环抗体反应可能归因于个体的免疫反应性。在腹股沟鼠疫和肺鼠疫恢复患者中,循环抗 F1 抗体滴度可在 10 年以上持续存在的发现表明,其可能参与了患者的保护。然而,需要进行包括对 Y. pestis 的细胞免疫反应分析在内的补充研究,以更好地了解长期保护和开发针对鼠疫的潜在疫苗。