Abstract

Many studies of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection and immunity have used mouse models. However, outcomes of vaccination and challenge with M. tuberculosis in inbred mouse strains do not reflect the full range of outcomes seen in people. Previous studies indicated that the novel Diversity Outbred (DO) mouse population exhibited a spectrum of outcomes after primary aerosol infection with M. tuberculosis Here, we demonstrate the value of this novel mouse population for studies of vaccination against M. tuberculosis aerosol challenge. Using the only currently licensed tuberculosis vaccine, we found that the DO population readily controlled systemic Mycobacterium bovis BCG bacterial burdens and that BCG vaccination significantly improved survival across the DO population upon challenge with M. tuberculosis Many individual DO mice that were vaccinated with BCG and then challenged with M. tuberculosis exhibited low bacterial burdens, low or even no systemic dissemination, little weight loss, and only minor lung pathology. In contrast, some BCG-vaccinated DO mice progressed quickly to fulminant disease upon M. tuberculosis challenge. Across the population, most of these disease parameters were at most modestly correlated with each other and were often discordant. This result suggests the need for a multiparameter metric to better characterize "disease" and "protection," with closer similarity to the complex case definitions used in people. Taken together, these results demonstrate that DO mice provide a novel small-animal model of vaccination against tuberculosis that better reflects the wide spectrum of outcomes seen in people.IMPORTANCE We vaccinated the Diversity Outbred (DO) population of mice with BCG, the only vaccine currently used to protect against tuberculosis, and then challenged them with M. tuberculosis by aerosol. We found that the BCG-vaccinated DO mouse population exhibited a wide range of outcomes, in which outcomes in individual mice ranged from minimal respiratory or systemic disease to fulminant disease and death. The breadth of these outcomes appears similar to the range seen in people, indicating that DO mice may serve as an improved small-animal model to study tuberculosis infection and immunity. Moreover, sophisticated tools are available for the use of these mice to map genes contributing to control of vaccination. Thus, the present studies provided an important new tool in the fight against tuberculosis.

Highlights

  • IMPORTANCE We vaccinated the Diversity Outbred (DO) population of mice with BCG, the only vaccine currently used to protect against tuberculosis, and challenged them with M. tuberculosis by aerosol

  • Studies examining primary aerosol M. tuberculosis infection in DO mice demonstrated a wide heterogeneity of disease presentations [18,19,20], according to which DO mice could be categorized based on survival and weight outcomes into “supersusceptible,” susceptible, and resistant groups

  • Previous studies that evaluated short-term survival in female DO mice found a supersusceptible population of mice that succumbed to M. tuberculosis infection within 35 days [19]

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Summary

Introduction

IMPORTANCE We vaccinated the Diversity Outbred (DO) population of mice with BCG, the only vaccine currently used to protect against tuberculosis, and challenged them with M. tuberculosis by aerosol. We found that the BCG-vaccinated DO mouse population exhibited a wide range of outcomes, in which outcomes in individual mice ranged from minimal respiratory or systemic disease to fulminant disease and death The breadth of these outcomes appears similar to the range seen in people, indicating that DO mice may serve as an improved small-animal model to study tuberculosis infection and immunity. The eight founding inbred strains that comprised the initial breeding pool for DO mice included traditional laboratory strains such as B6 and A/J, as well as three wild-caught mouse strains (CAST/EiJ, PWK/PhJ, and WSB/EiJ) that represent different murine genetic clades found throughout the world Extensive interbreeding of these eight strains has resulted in an outbred population of unique individuals representing infinite variety. Inbred Collaborative Cross (CC) mice, developed in parallel to DO mice, represent a complementary resource that may aid in testing hypotheses generated in DO studies [22]

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