Protective Levels of Diphtheria-Neutralizing Antibody Induced in Healthy Volunteers by Unilateral Priming-Boosting Intranasal Immunization Associated with Restricted Ipsilateral Mucosal Secretory Immunoglobulin A
Open Access
- 1 February 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Infection and Immunity
- Vol. 71 (2) , 726-732
- https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.71.2.726-732.2003
Abstract
Subunit intranasal vaccines offer the prospect of inducing combined systemic-mucosal immunity against mucosally transmitted infections such as human immunodeficiency virus. However, although human studies have demonstrated the induction of active immunity, secretory immunoglobulin A (sIgA) responses are variable, and no study has demonstrated protection by accepted vaccine-licensing criteria as measured by direct toxin-neutralizing activity. Using the genetically inactivated mutant diphtheria toxoid CRM197 in a bioadhesive polycationic polysaccharide chitosan delivery system, we found that a single nasal immunization was well tolerated and boosted antitoxin neutralizing activity in healthy volunteers, which could be further boosted by a second immunization. The neutralizing activity far exceeded accepted protective levels and was equivalent to that induced by standard intramuscular vaccine and significantly greater than intranasal immunization with CRM197 in the absence of chitosan. A striking but unexpected observation was that although unilateral intranasal immunization induced circulating antitoxin antibody-secreting cells, a nasal antitoxin sIgA response was seen only after the second immunization and only in the vaccinated nostril. If these data are reproduced in larger studies, an intranasal diphtheria vaccine based on CRM197-chitosan could be rapidly licensed for human use. However, a restricted sIgA response suggests that care must be taken in the priming-boosting strategy and clinical sampling techniques when evaluating such vaccines for the induction of local mucosal immunity.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nasal and Vaginal Vaccinations Have Differential Effects on Antibody Responses in Vaginal and Cervical Secretions in HumansInfection and Immunity, 2001
- Safety and Immunogenicity of a Proteosome- Shigella flexneri 2a Lipopolysaccharide Vaccine Administered Intranasally to Healthy AdultsInfection and Immunity, 2001
- A mucosal vaccine against diphtheria: formulation of cross reacting material (CRM197) of diphtheria toxin with chitosan enhances local and systemic antibody and Th2 responses following nasal deliveryVaccine, 2000
- Carbohydrate Biopolymers Enhance Antibody Responses to Mucosally Delivered Vaccine AntigensInfection and Immunity, 2000
- Chitosan as a Nasal Delivery System: The Effect of Chitosan Solutions on in Vitro and in Vivo Mucociliary Transport Rates in Human Turbinates and VolunteersJournal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 1997
- Differential expression of tissue-specific adhesion molecules on human circulating antibody-forming cells after systemic, enteric, and nasal immunizations. A molecular basis for the compartmentalization of effector B cell responses.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1997
- Intranasal booster vaccination against diphtheria and tetanus in manVaccine, 1997
- Molecular and cellular aspects of the secretory immunoglobulin system*APMIS, 1995
- The role of nasopharyngeal lymphoid tissueImmunology Today, 1992
- The early cellular and humoral immune response to primary and booster oral immunization with cholera toxin B subunitEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1991