A highly immunogenic vaccine platform against encapsulated pathogens using chimeric probiotic Escherichia coli membrane vesicles.
Ryoma NakaoHirotaka KobayashiYusuke IwabuchiKazuyoshi KawaharaSatoru HirayamaMadeleine RamstedtYuki SasakiMichiyo KataokaYukihiro AkedaMakoto OhnishiPublished in: NPJ vaccines (2022)
Vaccines against infectious diseases should elicit potent and long-lasting immunity, ideally even in those with age-related decline in immune response. Here we report a rational polysaccharide vaccine platform using probiotic Escherichia coli-derived membrane vesicles (MVs). First, we constructed a probiotic E. coli clone harboring the genetic locus responsible for biogenesis of serotype 14 pneumococcal capsular polysaccharides (CPS14) as a model antigen. CPS14 was found to be polymerized and mainly localized on the outer membrane of the E. coli cells. The glycine-induced MVs displayed the exogenous CPS14 at high density on the outermost surface, on which the CPS14 moiety was covalently tethered to a lipid A-core oligosaccharide anchor. In in vivo immunization experiments, CPS14 + MVs, but not a mixture of free CPS14 and empty MVs, strongly elicited IgG class-switch recombination with a Th1/Th2-balanced IgG subclass distribution without any adjuvant. In addition, CPS14 + MVs were structurally stable with heat treatment and immunization with the heat-treated MVs-elicited CPS14-specific antibody responses in mouse serum to levels comparable to those of non-treated CPS14 + MVs. Notably, the immunogenicity of CPS14 + MVs was significantly stronger than those of two currently licensed vaccines against pneumococci. The CPS14 + MV-elicited humoral immune responses persisted for 1 year in both blood and lung. Furthermore, the CPS14 + MV vaccine was widely efficacious in mice of different ages. Even in aged mice, vaccination resulted in robust production of CPS14-specific IgG that bound to the pneumococcal cell surface. Taken together, the present probiotic E. coli MVs-based vaccine platform offers a promising, generalizable solution against encapsulated pathogens.
Keyphrases
- escherichia coli
- immune response
- high density
- gene expression
- stem cells
- infectious diseases
- type diabetes
- dna methylation
- induced apoptosis
- cell surface
- early stage
- gram negative
- heat stress
- antimicrobial resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- high throughput
- signaling pathway
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- dendritic cells
- adipose tissue
- oxidative stress
- multidrug resistant
- genome wide
- endothelial cells
- replacement therapy
- wild type