Jenner Institute, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
School of Biosciences, University of Surrey, Guilford, United Kingdom.
Front Immunol. 2023 Aug 17;14:1248613. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2023.1248613. eCollection 2023.
is the causative agent of gonorrhea, a sexually transmitted infection responsible for a major burden of disease with a high global prevalence. Protective immunity to infection is often not observed in humans, possible due to high variability of key antigens, induction of blocking antibodies, or a large number of infections being relatively superficial and not inducing a strong immune response. is a strictly human pathogen, however, studies using mouse models provide useful insights into the immune response to gonorrhea. In mice, appears to avoid a protective Th1 response by inducing a less protective Th17 response. In mouse models, candidate vaccines which provoke a Th1 response can accelerate the clearance of gonococcus from the mouse female genital tract. Human studies indicate that natural infection often induces a limited immune response, with modest antibody responses, which may correlate with the clinical severity of gonococcal disease. Studies of cytokine responses to gonococcal infection in humans provide conflicting evidence as to whether infection induces an IL-17 response. However, there is evidence for limited induction of protective immunity from a study of female sex workers in Kenya. A controlled human infection model (CHIM) has been used to examine the immune response to gonococcal infection in male volunteers, but has not to date demonstrated protection against re-infection. Correlates of protection for gonorrhea are lacking, which has hampered the progress towards developing a successful vaccine. However, the finding that the serogroup B vaccines, elicit cross-protection against gonorrhea has invigorated the gonococcal vaccine field. More studies of infection in humans, either natural infection or CHIM studies, are needed to understand better gonococcal protective immunity.
淋病奈瑟菌是淋病的病原体,这是一种性传播感染,给全球带来了巨大的疾病负担。人类通常无法对感染产生保护性免疫,这可能是由于关键抗原的高度变异性、诱导阻断抗体,或者大量感染相对较浅,不会引起强烈的免疫反应。然而,淋病奈瑟菌是一种严格的人类病原体,使用小鼠模型进行的研究为了解淋病的免疫反应提供了有用的见解。在小鼠中,淋病奈瑟菌似乎通过诱导保护性较弱的 Th17 反应来避免保护性 Th1 反应。在小鼠模型中,引发 Th1 反应的候选疫苗可以加速从雌性生殖道清除淋球菌。人类研究表明,自然感染通常会引起有限的免疫反应,抗体反应适度,这可能与淋球菌病的临床严重程度相关。对人类淋球菌感染的细胞因子反应研究提供了相互矛盾的证据,表明感染是否会诱导 IL-17 反应。然而,肯尼亚性工作者的一项研究表明,有证据表明诱导了有限的保护性免疫。已使用人类感染控制模型 (CHIM) 来研究男性志愿者对淋球菌感染的免疫反应,但迄今为止尚未证明对再感染具有保护作用。缺乏淋病的保护相关因素,这阻碍了成功疫苗的研发进展。然而,发现血清型 B 疫苗可以交叉保护淋病,这为淋病疫苗领域注入了新的活力。需要更多的人类感染研究,无论是自然感染还是 CHIM 研究,以更好地了解淋病的保护性免疫。