Recombinant Urease and Urease DNA ofCoccidioides immitisElicit an Immunoprotective Response against Coccidioidomycosis in Mice
Open Access
- 1 May 2001
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Infection and Immunity
- Vol. 69 (5) , 2878-2887
- https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.69.5.2878-2887.2001
Abstract
Coccidioides immitis antigens which stimulate a T helper cell 1 (Th1) pathway of host immune response are considered to be essential components of a vaccine against coccidioidomycosis. Recombinant urease (rURE) and recombinant heat shock protein 60 (rHSP60) of C. immitis were expressed in Escherichia coli and tested as vaccine candidates in BALB/c mice. A synthetic oligodeoxynucleotide which contained unmethylated CpG dinucleotides and was previously shown to enhance a murine Th1 response was used as an immunoadjuvant. T cells isolated from the spleens and lymph nodes of the rURE- and rHSP60-immune mice showed in vitro proliferative responses to the respective recombinant protein, but only those T lymphocytes from rURE-immunized mice revealed markedly elevated levels of expression of selected Th1-type cytokine genes. BALB/c mice immunized subcutaneously with rURE and subsequently challenged by the intraperitoneal (i.p.) route with a lethal inoculum of C. immitis arthroconidia demonstrated a significant reduction in the level of C. immitis infection compared to control animals. rHSP60 was much less effective as a protective antigen. Evaluation of cytokine gene expression in lung tissue and levels of recombinant urease-specific immunoglobulins (immunoglobulin G1 [IgG1] versus IgG2a) in murine sera at 12 days after challenge provided additional evidence that immunization with rURE stimulated a Th1 response to the pathogen. Urease was further evaluated by expression of theURE gene in a mammalian plasmid vector (pSecTag2A.URE) which was used to immunize mice by the intradermal route. In this case, 82% of the vector construct-immunized animals survived more than 40 days after i.p. infection, compared to only 10% of the mice immunized with the vector alone. In addition, 87% of the pSecTag2A.URE-immunized survivors had sterile lungs and spleens. These data support the need for further evaluation of the C. immitis urease as a candidate vaccine against coccidioidomycosis.Keywords
This publication has 71 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Major Cell Surface Antigen of Coccidioides immitis Which Elicits Both Humoral and Cellular Immune ResponsesInfection and Immunity, 2000
- Biolistic transformation of the human pathogenic fungus Coccidioides immitisJournal of Microbiological Methods, 1998
- DNA Vaccines Expressing either the GP or NP Genes of Ebola Virus Protect Mice from Lethal ChallengeVirology, 1998
- Evidence for a phylogenetic connection between Coccidioides immitis and Uncinocarpus reesii (Onygenaceae)Microbiology, 1994
- Evaluation of the Protective Efficacy of the KilledCoccidioides immitisSpherule Vaccine in HumansAmerican Review of Respiratory Disease, 1993
- Coccidioidomycosis during human immunodeficiency virus infection: results of a prospective study in a coccidioidal endemic areaThe American Journal of Medicine, 1993
- Conidia of Coccidioides immitisPublished by Springer Nature ,1991
- Epidemiology of CoccidioidomycosisPublished by Springer Nature ,1988
- Purification of the spherule-endospore phase ofCoccidioides immitisMedical Mycology, 1962
- Epidemiology of Acute Coccidioidomycosis with Erythema Nodosum (“San Joaquin” or “Valley Fever”)American Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1940