Exposure to Group A Streptococcus leads to a broad spectrum of disease and sequelae, as the bacterium employs a wide range of virulence factors to facilitate colonization of the host, propagation and onward transmission, disrupting both innate and adaptive immune responses. The protease SpyCEP has a crucial role in contributing to bacterial immune evasion by impairing neutrophil recruitment and killing of bacteria through the cleavage of interleukin-8 (IL-8). Given this critical function, SpyCEP represents a key vaccine antigen and quantifying functional anti-SpyCEP antibodies represents not only an important marker of vaccine efficacy, but also a tool to dissect the natural immune response. Here, we report the development and characterization of an IL-8 cleavage inhibition assay to measure the function of anti-SpyCEP antibodies in human sera. The assay was demonstrated to be sensitive, highly specific, linear and reproducible, and suitable for evaluating the function of anti-SpyCEP antibodies induced in humans in vaccine clinical trials and in observational studies of natural immunity.
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