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1.
Vaccines (Basel) ; 9(8)2021 Aug 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34451996

ABSTRACT

Chlamydia trachomatis causes most bacterial sexually transmitted diseases worldwide. Different major outer membrane proteins (MOMPs) define various serovars of this intracellular pathogen: In women, D to L3 can cause urethritis, cervicitis, salpingitis, and oophoritis, and, thus, infertility. Protective immunity might be serovar-specific since chlamydial infection does not appear to induce an effective acquired immunity and reinfections occur. A better understanding of induced cross-serovar protection is essential for the selection of suitable antigens in vaccine development. In our mouse lung infection screening model, we evaluated the urogenital serovars D, E, and L2 in this regard. Seven weeks after primary infection or mock-infection, respectively, mice were infected a second time with the identical or one of the other serovars. Body weight and clinical score were monitored for 7 days. Near the peak of the second lung infection, bacterial load, myeloperoxidase, IFN-γ, and TNF-α in lung homogenate, as well as chlamydia-specific IgG levels in blood were determined. Surprisingly, compared with mice that were infected then for the first time, almost independent of the serovar combination used, all acquired parameters of disease were similarly diminished. Our reinfection study suggests that efficient cross-serovar protection could be achieved by a vaccine combining chlamydial antigens that do not include nonconserved MOMP regions.

2.
Vaccines (Basel) ; 9(6)2021 Jun 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34204170

ABSTRACT

Chlamydia trachomatis is the most frequent sexually-transmitted disease-causing bacterium. Urogenital serovars of this intracellular pathogen lead to urethritis and cervicitis. Ascending infections result in pelvic inflammatory disease, salpingitis, and oophoritis. One of 200 urogenital infections leads to tubal infertility. Serovars A-C cause trachoma with visual impairment. There is an urgent need for a vaccine. We characterized a new five-component subunit vaccine in a mouse vaccination-lung challenge infection model. Four recombinant Pmp family-members and Ctad1 from C. trachomatis serovar E, all of which participate in adhesion and binding of chlamydial elementary bodies to host cells, were combined with the mucosal adjuvant cyclic-di-adenosine monophosphate. Intranasal application led to a high degree of cross-serovar protection against urogenital and ocular strains of C. trachomatis, which lasted at least five months. Critical evaluated parameters were body weight, clinical score, chlamydial load, a granulocyte marker and the cytokines IFN-γ/TNF-α in lung homogenate. Vaccine antigen-specific antibodies and a mixed Th1/Th2/Th17 T cell response with multi-functional CD4+ and CD8+ T cells correlate with protection. However, serum-transfer did not protect the recipients suggesting that circulating antibodies play only a minor role. In the long run, our new vaccine might help to prevent the feared consequences of human C. trachomatis infections.

3.
Front Immunol ; 12: 626627, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33746963

ABSTRACT

Recent advances in complement research have revolutionized our understanding of its role in immune responses. The immunomodulatory features of complement in infections by intracellular pathogens, e.g., viruses, are attracting increasing attention. Thereby, local production and activation of complement by myeloid-derived cells seem to be crucial. We could recently show that C3, a key player of the complement cascade, is required for effective defense against the intracellular bacterium Chlamydia psittaci. Avian zoonotic strains of this pathogen cause life-threatening pneumonia with systemic spread in humans; closely related non-avian strains are responsible for less severe diseases of domestic animals with economic loss. To clarify how far myeloid- and non-myeloid cell-derived complement contributes to immune response and resulting protection against C. psittaci, adoptive bone marrow transfer experiments focusing on C3 were combined with challenge experiments using a non-avian (BSL 2) strain of this intracellular bacterium. Surprisingly, our data prove that for C. psittaci-induced pneumonia in mice, non-myeloid-derived, circulating/systemic C3 has a leading role in protection, in particular on the development of pathogen-specific T- and B- cell responses. In contrast, myeloid-derived and most likely locally produced C3 plays only a minor, mainly fine-tuning role. The work we present here describes authentic, although less pronounced, antigen directed immune responses.


Subject(s)
Adaptive Immunity , Chlamydia Infections/microbiology , Chlamydophila psittaci/pathogenicity , Complement C3/metabolism , Lung/microbiology , Pneumonia, Bacterial/microbiology , Adoptive Transfer , Animals , B-Lymphocytes/immunology , B-Lymphocytes/metabolism , B-Lymphocytes/microbiology , Bone Marrow Transplantation , Cells, Cultured , Chlamydia Infections/immunology , Chlamydia Infections/metabolism , Chlamydophila psittaci/immunology , Complement C3/genetics , Disease Models, Animal , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Lung/immunology , Lung/metabolism , Male , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Pneumonia, Bacterial/immunology , Pneumonia, Bacterial/metabolism , T-Lymphocytes/immunology , T-Lymphocytes/metabolism , T-Lymphocytes/microbiology , Transplantation Chimera
4.
Front Immunol ; 12: 580594, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33767691

ABSTRACT

The zoonotic intracellular bacterium Chlamydia psittaci causes life-threatening pneumonia in humans. During mouse lung infection, complement factor C3 and the anaphylatoxin C3a augment protection against C. psittaci by a so far unknown mechanism. To clarify how complement contributes to the early, innate and the late, specific immune response and resulting protection, this study addresses the amount of C3, the timing when its presence is required as well as the anaphylatoxin receptor(s) mediating its effects and the complement-dependent migration of dendritic cells. Challenge experiments with C. psittaci on various complement KO mice were combined with transient decomplementation by pharmacological treatment, as well as the analysis of in vivo dendritic cells migration. Our findings reveal that a plasma concentration of C3 close to wildtype levels was required to achieve full protection. The diminished levels of C3 of heterozygote C3+/- mice permitted already relative effective protection and improved survival as compared to C3-/- mice, but overall recovery of these animals was delayed. Complement was in particular required during the first days of infection. However, additionally, it seems to support protection at later stages. Migration of CD103+ dendritic cells from the infected lung to the draining lymph node-as prerequisite of antigen presentation-depended on C3 and C3aR and/or C5aR. Our results provide unique mechanistic insight in various aspects of complement-dependent immune responses under almost identical, rather physiological experimental conditions. Our study contributes to an improved understanding of the role of complement, and C3a in particular, in infections by intracellular bacteria.


Subject(s)
Cell Movement/immunology , Chlamydiaceae Infections/immunology , Chlamydophila psittaci/immunology , Complement C3a/immunology , Dendritic Cells/immunology , Lung/immunology , Anaphylatoxins/immunology , Anaphylatoxins/metabolism , Animals , Cell Line , Chlamydiaceae Infections/metabolism , Chlamydiaceae Infections/microbiology , Chlamydophila psittaci/physiology , Complement Activation/immunology , Complement C3a/genetics , Complement C3a/metabolism , Dendritic Cells/cytology , Dendritic Cells/microbiology , Lung/metabolism , Lung/microbiology , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Receptors, Complement/genetics , Receptors, Complement/immunology , Receptors, Complement/metabolism , Signal Transduction/immunology , Survival Analysis
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