Wessels M R, Paoletti L C, Guttormsen H K, Michon F, D'Ambra A J, Kasper D L
Channing Laboratory, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Infect Immun. 1998 May;66(5):2186-92. doi: 10.1128/IAI.66.5.2186-2192.1998.
In this study, we tested the hypothesis that the immunogenicity and protective efficacy of polysaccharide-protein conjugate vaccines are influenced by three variables: (i) molecular size of the conjugate, (ii) molecular size of the polysaccharide used for conjugation, and (iii) extent of polysaccharide-to-protein cross-linking. Type III group B Streptococcus capsular polysaccharide was linked by reductive amination at multiple sites to tetanus toxoid to create a polysaccharide-protein conjugate (III-TT). A single lot of III-TT was fractionated into small, medium, and large Mr pools. Whereas all three conferred protection in a maternal immunization-neonatal challenge model in mice, the smallest Mr conjugate evoked less polysaccharide-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) than the two larger Mr conjugates. To test whether the molecular size of the polysaccharide used for conjugation also affected the immunogenicity of the conjugate, vaccines were synthesized using capsular polysaccharides with Mrs of 38,000, 105,000, and 349,000. Polysaccharide-specific IgG responses in mice increased with the Mr of the polysaccharides, and protective efficacy was lower for the smallest polysaccharide conjugate compared to the other two vaccines. Immunogenicity testing of a series of vaccines prepared with different degrees of polysaccharide-to-protein cross-linking demonstrated higher polysaccharide-specific antibody responses as the extent of cross-linking increased. However, opsonic activity was greatest in mouse antiserum raised to a moderately cross-linked conjugate, suggesting that some antibodies evoked by highly cross-linked conjugates were directed to a nonprotective epitope. We conclude that conjugate size, polysaccharide size, and degree of polysaccharide-protein cross-linking influence the immunogenicity and protective efficacy of III-TT conjugate vaccines.
在本研究中,我们检验了以下假设:多糖-蛋白质结合疫苗的免疫原性和保护效力受三个变量影响:(i)结合物的分子大小;(ii)用于结合的多糖的分子大小;(iii)多糖与蛋白质的交联程度。通过还原胺化反应在多个位点将B族链球菌Ⅲ型荚膜多糖与破伤风类毒素连接,制成多糖-蛋白质结合物(Ⅲ-TT)。将一批Ⅲ-TT分离成小分子、中等分子和大分子质量组分。虽然这三种组分在小鼠母体免疫-新生鼠攻毒模型中均具有保护作用,但最小分子质量的结合物诱导产生的多糖特异性免疫球蛋白G(IgG)比另外两种较大分子质量的结合物少。为了检验用于结合的多糖的分子大小是否也会影响结合物的免疫原性,使用分子质量分别为38,000、105,000和349,000的荚膜多糖合成疫苗。小鼠体内的多糖特异性IgG反应随多糖分子质量的增加而增强,与其他两种疫苗相比,最小多糖结合物的保护效力较低。对一系列不同多糖-蛋白质交联程度制备的疫苗进行免疫原性测试表明,随着交联程度的增加,多糖特异性抗体反应增强。然而,对中等交联结合物产生的小鼠抗血清的调理活性最强,这表明高度交联结合物诱导产生的一些抗体针对的是非保护性表位。我们得出结论,结合物大小、多糖大小和多糖-蛋白质交联程度会影响Ⅲ-TT结合疫苗的免疫原性和保护效力。