Induction of transmucosal protection by oral vaccination with an attenuated Chlamydia .
Yihui WangRongze HeHalah WinnerMarie-Claire GauduinNu ZhangCheng HeGuangming ZhongPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Chlamydia muridarum has been used to study chlamydial pathogenesis since it induces mice to develop hydrosalpinx, a pathology observed in C. trachomatis -infected women. We identified a C. muridarum mutant that is no longer able to induce hydrosalpinx. In the current study, we evaluated the mutant as an attenuated vaccine. Following an intravaginal immunization with the mutant, mice were protected from hydrosalpinx induced by wild type C. muridarum . However, the mutant itself productively colonized the mouse genital tract and produced infectious organisms in vaginal swabs. Nevertheless, the mutant failed to produce infectious shedding in the rectal swabs following an oral inoculation. Importantly, mice orally inoculated with the mutant mounted transmucosal immunity against challenge infection of wild type C. muridarum in the genital tract. The protection was detected as early as day 3 following the challenge infection and the immunized mice were protected from any significant pathology in the upper genital tract. However, the same orally immunized mice failed to prevent the colonization of wild type C. muridarum in the gastrointestinal tract. The transmucosal immunity induced by the oral mutant was further validated in the airway. The orally vaccinated mice were protected from both lung infection and systemic toxicity caused by intranasally inoculated wild type C. muridarum although the same mice still permitted the gastrointestinal colonization by the wild type C. muridarum . These observations suggest that the mutant C. muridarum may be developed into an intr acellular o ral v accine vector (or IntrOv) for selectively inducing transmucosal immunity in extra-gut tissues.