The O Antigen Is a Critical Antigen for the Development of a Protective Immune Response to Bordetella parapertussis
Open Access
- 1 November 2009
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Infection and Immunity
- Vol. 77 (11) , 5050-5058
- https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.00667-09
Abstract
Despite excellent vaccine coverage in developed countries, whooping cough is a reemerging disease that can be caused by two closely related pathogens, Bordetella pertussis and B. parapertussis. The two are antigenically distinct, and current vaccines, containing only B. pertussis-derived antigens, confer efficient protection against B. pertussis but not against B. parapertussis. B. pertussis does not express the O antigen, while B. parapertussis retains it as a dominant surface antigen. Since the O antigen is a protective antigen for many pathogenic bacteria, we examined whether this factor is a potential protective antigen for B. parapertussis. In a mouse model of infection, immunization with wild-type B. parapertussis elicited a strong antibody response to the O antigen and conferred efficient protection against a subsequent B. parapertussis challenge. However, immunization with an isogenic mutant lacking the O antigen, B. parapertussis Deltawbm, induced antibodies that recognized other antigens but did not efficiently mediate opsonophagocytosis of B. parapertussis. The passive transfer of sera raised against B. parapertussis, but not B. parapertussis Deltawbm, reduced B. parapertussis loads in the lower respiratory tracts of mice. The addition of 10 microg of purified B. parapertussis lipopolysaccharide (LPS), which contains the O antigen, but not B. parapertussis Deltawbm LPS drastically improved the efficacy of the acellular vaccine Adacel against B. parapertussis. These data suggest that the O antigen is a critical protective antigen of B. parapertussis and its inclusion can substantially improve whooping cough vaccine efficacy against this pathogen.Keywords
This publication has 76 references indexed in Scilit:
- O Antigen Allows B. parapertussis to Evade B. pertussis Vaccine–Induced Immunity by Blocking Binding and Functions of Cross-Reactive AntibodiesPLOS ONE, 2009
- Inefficient Toll-Like Receptor-4 Stimulation Enables Bordetella parapertussis to Avoid Host ImmunityPLOS ONE, 2009
- Saccharide/protein conjugate vaccines for Bordetella species: Preparation of saccharide, development of new conjugation procedures, and physico-chemical and immunological characterization of the conjugatesVaccine, 2008
- O Antigen Protects Bordetella parapertussis from ComplementInfection and Immunity, 2008
- The O Antigen Enables Bordetella parapertussis To Avoid Bordetella pertussis -Induced ImmunityInfection and Immunity, 2007
- Comparative Role of Immunoglobulin A in Protective Immunity against the BordetellaeInfection and Immunity, 2007
- Use of a Genetically Defined Double Mutant Strain of Bordetella bronchiseptica Lacking Adenylate Cyclase and Type III Secretion as a Live VaccineInfection and Immunity, 2007
- Shield as Signal: Lipopolysaccharides and the Evolution of Immunity to Gram-Negative BacteriaPLoS Pathogens, 2006
- Molecular Pathogenesis, Epidemiology, and Clinical Manifestations of Respiratory Infections Due toBordetella pertussisand OtherBordetellaSubspeciesClinical Microbiology Reviews, 2005
- Lipopolysaccharide expression within the genus Bordetella: influence of temperature and phase variationMicrobiology, 1998