Abstract

Pertussis is a respiratory infectious disease that has been resurged during the last decades. The change from the traditional multi-antigen whole-cell pertussis (wP) vaccines to acellular pertussis (aP) vaccines that consist of a few antigens formulated with alum, appears to be a key factor in the resurgence of pertussis in many countries. Though current aP vaccines have helped to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with pertussis, they do not provide durable immunity or adequate protection against the disease caused by the current circulating strains of Bordetella pertussis, which have evolved in the face of the selection pressure induced by the vaccines. Based on the hypothesis that a new vaccine containing multiple antigens could overcome deficiencies in the current aP vaccines, we have designed and characterized a vaccine candidate based on outer membrane vesicle (OMVs). Here we show that the OMVs vaccine, but not an aP vaccine, protected mice against lung infection with a circulating pertactin (PRN)-deficient isolate. Using isogenic bacteria that in principle only differ in PRN expression, we found that deficiency in PRN appears to be largely responsible for the failure of the aP vaccine to protect against this circulating clinical isolates. Regarding the durability of induced immunity, we have already reported that the OMV vaccine is able to induce long-lasting immune responses that effectively prevent infection with B. pertussis. Consistent with this, here we found that CD4 T cells with a tissue-resident memory (TRM) cell phenotype (CD44+CD62LlowCD69+ and/or CD103+) accumulated in the lungs of mice 14 days after immunization with 2 doses of the OMVs vaccine. CD4 TRM cells, which have previously been shown to play a critical role sustained protective immunity against B. pertussis, were also detected in mice immunized with wP vaccine, but not in the animals immunized with a commercial aP vaccine. The CD4 TRM cells secreted IFN-γ and IL-17 and were significantly expanded through local proliferation following respiratory challenge of mice with B. pertussis. Our findings that the OMVs vaccine induce respiratory CD4 TRM cells may explain the ability of this vaccine to induce long-term protection and is therefore an ideal candidate for a third generation vaccine against B. pertussis.

Highlights

  • Vaccination is the most cost-effective strategy to prevent life threatening infectious diseases, these diseases continue to be the main cause of global morbidity and mortality (Plotkin, 2005)

  • We compared the protective capacity of the Outer Membrane Vesicles (OMVs) vaccine with that induced with a commercially available aP vaccine against infection with B. pertussis Tohama phase I strain [ptxP1 variant and prn1 allele, PRN(+)] or PRN(-) clinical isolate of B. pertussis Bp935

  • Mice immunized with the OMVs had 3 Log10 reduction in colonies 7 days after challenge with B. pertussis PRN(-) compared with the non-immunized mice, whereas the CFU counts in the lungs of mice immunized with the commercial aP vaccine was only reduced by 1 log10 (Figure 1B)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Vaccination is the most cost-effective strategy to prevent life threatening infectious diseases, these diseases continue to be the main cause of global morbidity and mortality (Plotkin, 2005). We have designed a new multi-antigen aP vaccine formulation that shares the beneficial properties of current aP vaccines in terms of biosafety and those of wP vaccines in terms of immunogenicity and protective capacity (International patent granted in the USA and in process in other countries, Application Number: PCT/IB2014/060143) (Roberts et al, 2008; Asensio et al, 2011; Gaillard et al, 2014) This new acellular formulation has been obtained from membrane components of B. pertussis (outer membrane vesicles, OMVs) in which antigens are presented in their native conformation, with membraneassociated PAMPs acting as immunostimulatory molecules, such as in the commercial wP vaccines. Our findings suggest that the OMVs-vaccine is an ideal candidate for the development of a third generation pertussis vaccine

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