Last data update: Mar 21, 2025. (Total: 48935 publications since 2009)
Records 1-30 (of 30 Records) |
Query Trace: Carlone G[original query] |
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Late effects of total body irradiation on hematopoietic recovery and immune function in rhesus macaques
Hale LP , Rajam G , Carlone GM , Jiang C , Owzar K , Dugan G , Caudell D , Chao N , Cline JM , Register TC , Sempowski GD . PLoS One 2019 14 (2) e0210663 While exposure to radiation can be lifesaving in certain settings, it can also potentially result in long-lasting adverse effects, particularly to hematopoietic and immune cells. This study investigated hematopoietic recovery and immune function in rhesus macaques Cross-sectionally (at a single time point) 2 to 5 years after exposure to a single large dose (6.5 to 8.4 Gray) of total body radiation (TBI) derived from linear accelerator-derived photons (2 MeV, 80 cGy/minute) or Cobalt 60-derived gamma irradiation (60 cGy/min). Hematopoietic recovery was assessed through measurement of complete blood counts, lymphocyte subpopulation analysis, and thymus function assessment. Capacity to mount specific antibody responses against rabies, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and tetanus antigens was determined 2 years after TBI. Irradiated macaques showed increased white blood cells, decreased platelets, and decreased frequencies of peripheral blood T cells. Effects of prior radiation on production and export of new T cells by the thymus was dependent on age at the time of analysis, with evidence of interaction with radiation dose for CD8+ T cells. Irradiated and control animals mounted similar mean antibody responses to proteins from tetanus and rabies and to 10 of 11 serotype-specific pneumococcal polysaccharides. However, irradiated animals uniformly failed to make antibodies against polysaccharides from serotype 5 pneumococci, in contrast to the robust responses of non-irradiated controls. Trends toward decreased serum levels of anti-tetanus IgM and slower peak antibody responses to rabies were also observed. Taken together, these data show that dose-related changes in peripheral blood cells and immune responses to both novel and recall antigens can be detected 2 to 5 years after exposure to whole body radiation. Longer term follow-up data on this cohort and independent validation will be helpful to determine whether these changes persist or whether additional changes become evident with increasing time since radiation, particularly as animals begin to develop aging-related changes in immune function. |
Development and validation of a robust multiplex serological assay to quantify antibodies specific to pertussis antigens
Rajam G , Carlone G , Kim E , Choi J , Paulos S , Park S , Jeyachandran A , Gorantla Y , Wong E , Sabnis A , Browning P , Desai R , Quinn CP , Schiffer J . Biologicals 2018 57 9-20 Despite wide spread vaccination, the public health burden of pertussis remains substantial. Current acellular pertussis vaccines comprise upto five Bordetella pertussis (Bp) antigens. Performing an ELISA to quantify antibody for each antigen is laborious and challenging to apply to pediatric samples where serum volume may be limited. We developed a microsphere based multiplex antibody capture assay (MMACA) to quantify antibodies to five pertussis antigens; pertussis toxin, pertactin, filamentous hemagglutinin and fimbrial antigens 2/3, and adenylate cyclase toxin in a single reaction (5-plex) with a calibrated reference standard, QC reagents and SAS((R)) based data analysis program. The goodness of fit (R(2)) of the standard curves for five analytes was >/=0.99, LLOQ 0.04-0.15 IU or AU/mL, accuracy 1.9%-23.8% (%E), dilutional linearity slopes 0.93-1.02 and regression coefficients r(2)=0.91-0.99. MMACA had acceptable precision within a median CV of 16.0%-22.8%. Critical reagents, antigen conjugated microsphere and reporter antibody exhibited acceptable (<12.3%) lot-lot variation. MMACA can be completed in <3h, requires low serum volume (5muL/multiplex assay) and has fast data turnaround time (<1min). MMACA has been successfully developed and validated as a sensitive, specific, robust and rugged method suitable for simultaneous quantification of anti-Bp antibodies in serum, plasma and DBS. |
Meningococcal Antigen Typing System (MATS)-based Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B coverage prediction for the MenB-4C vaccine in the United States
Rajam G , Stella M , Kim E , Paulos S , Boccadifuoco G , Serino L , Carlone G , Medini D . mSphere 2017 2 (6) Neisseria meningitidis is the most common cause of bacterial meningitis in children and young adults worldwide. A 4-component vaccine against N. meningitidis serogroup B (MenB) disease (MenB-4C [Bexsero]; GSK) combining factor H binding protein (fHBP), neisserial heparin binding protein (NHBA), neisserial adhesin A (NadA), and PorA-containing outer membrane vesicles was recently approved for use in the United States and other countries worldwide. Because the public health impact of MenB-4C in the United States is unclear, we used the meningococcal antigen typing system (MATS) to assess the strain coverage in a panel of strains representative of serogroup B (NmB) disease in the United States. MATS data correlate with killing in the human complement serum bactericidal assay (hSBA) and predict the susceptibility of NmB strains to killing in the hSBA, the accepted correlate of protection for MenB-4C vaccine. A panel of 442 NmB United States clinical isolates (collected in 2000 to 2008) whose data were down weighted with respect to the Oregon outbreak was selected from the Active Bacterial Core Surveillance (ABCs; CDC, Atlanta, GA) laboratory. MATS results examined to determine strain coverage were linked to multilocus sequence typing and antigen sequence data. MATS predicted that 91% (95% confidence interval [CI95], 72% to 96%) of the NmB strains causing disease in the United States would be covered by the MenB-4C vaccine, with the estimated coverage ranging from 88% to 97% by year with no detectable temporal trend. More than half of the covered strains could be targeted by two or more antigens. NHBA conferred coverage to 83% (CI95, 45% to 93%) of the strains, followed by factor H-binding protein (fHbp), which conferred coverage to 53% (CI95, 46% to 57%); PorA, which conferred coverage to 5.9%; and NadA, which conferred coverage to 2.5% (CI95, 1.1% to 5.2%). Two major clonal complexes (CC32 and CC41/44) had 99% strain coverage. The most frequent MATS phenotypes (39%) were fHbp and NHBA double positives. MATS predicts over 90% MenB-4C strain coverage in the United States, and the prediction is stable in time and consistent among bacterial genotypes. IMPORTANCE The meningococcal antigen typing system (MATS) is an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)-based system that assesses the levels of expression and immune reactivity of the three recombinant MenB-4C antigens and, in conjunction with PorA variable 2 (VR2) sequencing, provides an estimate of the susceptibility of NmB isolates to killing by MenB-4C-induced antibodies. MATS assays or similar antigen phenotype analyses assume importance under conditions in which analyses of vaccine coverage predictions are not feasible with existing strategies, including large efficacy trials or functional antibody screening of an exhaustive strain panel. MATS screening of a panel of NmB U.S. isolates (n = 442) predicts high MenB-4C vaccine coverage in the United States. |
Immune Responses in U.S. Military Personnel Who Received Meningococcal Conjugate Vaccine (MenACWY) Concomitantly with Other Vaccines Were Higher than in Personnel Who Received MenACWY Alone
Broderick MP , Romero-Steiner S , Rajam G , Johnson SE , Milton A , Kim E , Choi LJ , Radin JM , Schmidt DS , Carlone GM , Messonnier N , Faix DJ . Clin Vaccine Immunol 2016 23 (8) 672-80 Immunological responses to vaccination can differ depending on whether the vaccine is given alone or with other vaccines. This study was a retrospective evaluation of the immunogenicity of a tetravalent meningococcal conjugate vaccine (MenACWY) administered alone (n = 41) or concomitantly with other vaccines (n = 279) to United States military personnel (mean age = 21.6 years) entering the military between 2006 and 2008. Concomitant vaccines included tetanus/diphtheria (Td), inactivated polio vaccine (IPV), hepatitis vaccines, various influenza vaccines, among others; two vaccine groups excluded Tdap and IPV. Immune responses were evaluated in baseline and post-vaccination sera for Neisseria meningitidis serogroups C and Y 1-12 months (mean = 4.96) following vaccination. Functional antibodies were measured by using a serum bactericidal antibody assay with rabbit complement (rSBA) and by measurement of serogroup-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies. The percentage of vaccinees reaching threshold levels (IgG ≥2 mug/mL; rSBA titer ≥8) corresponding to an immunologic response was higher post-vaccination than at baseline (p < 0.001). Administration of MenACWY along with other vaccines was associated with higher geometric means of IgG concentrations and rSBA titers than those measured 4.60 months after a single dose of MenACWY. In addition, higher percentages of vaccinees reached the immunological threshold (odds ratios [ORs] range = 1.5 to 21.7) and more of them seroconverted (ORs range = 1.8 to 4.8) when MenACWY was administered with any other vaccine than when administered alone. Additional prospective randomized clinical trials are needed to confirm the observed differences among groups in the immune response to MenACWY when given concomitantly with other vaccines to United States military personnel. |
Neisseria meningitidis Group A IgG1 and IgG2 subclass immune response in African children aged 12-23 months following meningococcal vaccination
Holme D , Findlow H , Sow SO , Idoko OT , Preziosi MP , Carlone G , Plikaytis BD , Borrow R . Clin Infect Dis 2015 61 Suppl 5 S563-9 BACKGROUND: A group A meningococcal conjugate vaccine, PsA-TT, was licensed in 2010 and was previously studied in a phase 2 clinical trial to evaluate its safety and immunogenicity in African children 12-23 months of age. METHODS: Subjects received either PsA-TT; meningococcal group A, C, W, Y polysaccharide vaccine (PsACWY); or Haemophilus influenzae type b conjugate vaccine (Hib-TT). Forty weeks following primary vaccination, the 3 groups were further randomized to receive either PsA-TT, one-fifth dose of PsACWY, or Hib-TT. Group A-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) subclass response was characterized using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. RESULTS: The predominant IgG subclass response, regardless of vaccine, was IgG1. One month following primary vaccination, the geometric mean concentrations (GMCs) of IgG1 and IgG2 in the PsA-TT group were 21.73 microg/mL and 6.27 microg/mL, whereas in the PsACWY group the mean GMCs were 2.01 microg/mL and 0.97 microg/mL, respectively (P < .0001). Group A-specific IgG1 and IgG2 GMCs remained greater in the PsA-TT group than in the PsACWY group 40 weeks following primary vaccination (P < .0001). One week following revaccination, those given 2 doses of PsA-TT had the greatest IgG1 and IgG2 GMCs of 125.23 microg/mL and 36.12 microg/mL, respectively (P = .0008), and demonstrated a significant increase in IgG1:IgG2 mean ratio, indicative of the T-cell-dependent response associated with conjugate vaccines. CONCLUSIONS: Vaccination of African children aged 12-24 months with either PsA-TT or PsACWY elicited a predominantly IgG1 response. The IgG1:IgG2 mean ratio decreased following successive vaccination with PsACWY, indicating a shift toward IgG2, suggestive of the T-cell-independent immune response commonly associated with polysaccharide antigens. CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION: SRCTN78147026. |
Human complement bactericidal responses to a group A meningococcal conjugate vaccine in Africans and comparison to responses measured by 2 other group A immunoassays
Price GA , Hollander AM , Plikaytis BD , Mocca BT , Carlone G , Findlow H , Borrow R , Sow SO , Diallo A , Idoko OT , Enwere GC , Elie C , Preziosi MP , Kulkarni PS , Bash MC . Clin Infect Dis 2015 61 Suppl 5 S554-62 BACKGROUND: PsA-TT (MenAfriVac) is a conjugated polysaccharide vaccine developed to eliminate group A meningococcal disease in Africa. Vaccination of African study participants with 1 dose of PsA-TT led to the production of anti-A polysaccharide antibodies and increased serum bactericidal activity measured using rabbit complement (rSBA). Bactericidal responses measured with human complement (hSBA) are presented here. METHODS: Sera collected before and at 28 days and 1 year after vaccination with either PsA-TT or quadrivalent polysaccharide vaccine (PsACWY) from a random, age-distributed 360-subject subset of the Meningitis Vaccine Project study of PsA-TT in Africans aged 2-29 years were tested for hSBA. Geometric mean titer, fold-rise, and threshold analyses were compared between vaccine groups and age groups. hSBA, rSBA, and immunoglobulin G (IgG) enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) results were compared and assay correlation and agreement determined. RESULTS: hSBA responses to PsA-TT were substantially higher than those to PsACWY at 28 days and 1 year following immunization, similar to previously reported rSBA and IgG results. The hSBA and IgG ELISA results identified differences between age groups that were not evident by rSBA. The rSBA data indicated sustained high titers 1 year after immunization, whereas hSBA GMTs at 1 year approached 4 in young children. CONCLUSIONS: The high level of protection following PsA-TT immunization campaigns is consistent with the strong hSBA immune responses observed here. Future implementation decisions will likely depend on immunologic data and their long-term correlation with disease and carriage prevention. Expanded immunologic and epidemiologic surveillance may improve the interpretation of differences between these immunoassays. |
Antibody persistence 1-5 years following vaccination with MenAfriVac in African children vaccinated at 12-23 months of age
Tapia MD , Findlow H , Idoko OT , Preziosi MP , Kulkarni PS , Enwere GC , Elie C , Parulekar V , Sow SO , Haidara FC , Diallo F , Doumbia M , Akinsola AK , Adegbola RA , Kampmann B , Chaumont J , Martellet L , Marchetti E , Viviani S , Tang Y , Plikaytis BD , Marc LaForce F , Carlone G , Borrow R . Clin Infect Dis 2015 61 Suppl 5 S514-20 BACKGROUND: Following mass vaccination campaigns in the African meningitis belt with group A meningococcal conjugate vaccine, MenAfriVac (PsA-TT), disease due to group A meningococci has nearly disappeared. Antibody persistence in healthy African toddlers was investigated. METHODS: African children vaccinated at 12-23 months of age with PsA-TT were followed for evaluation of antibody persistence up to 5 years after primary vaccination. Antibody persistence was evaluated by measuring group A serum bactericidal antibody (SBA) with rabbit complement and by a group A-specific IgG enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). RESULTS: Group A antibodies measured by SBA and ELISA were shown to decline in the year following vaccination and plateaued at levels significantly above baseline for up to 5 years following primary vaccination. CONCLUSIONS: A single dose of PsA-TT induces long-term sustained levels of group A meningococcal antibodies for up to 5 years after vaccination. |
Antibody persistence at 1 and 4 years following a single dose of MenAfriVac or quadrivalent polysaccharide vaccine in healthy subjects aged 2-29 years
Diallo A , Sow SO , Idoko OT , Hirve S , Findlow H , Preziosi MP , Elie C , Kulkarni PS , Parulekar V , Diarra B , Cheick Haidara F , Diallo F , Tapia M , Akinsola AK , Adegbola RA , Bavdekar A , Juvekar S , Chaumont J , Martellet L , Marchetti E , LaForce MF , Plikaytis BD , Enwere GC , Tang Y , Borrow R , Carlone G , Viviani S . Clin Infect Dis 2015 61 Suppl 5 S521-30 BACKGROUND: Mass vaccination campaigns of the population aged 1-29 years with 1 dose of group A meningococcal (MenA) conjugate vaccine (PsA-TT, MenAfriVac) in African meningitis belt countries has resulted in the near-disappearance of MenA. The vaccine was tested in clinical trials in Africa and in India and found to be safe and highly immunogenic compared with the group A component of the licensed quadrivalent polysaccharide vaccine (PsACWY). Antibody persistence in Africa and in India was investigated. METHODS: A total of 900 subjects aged 2-29 years were followed up for 4 years in Senegal, Mali, and The Gambia (study A). A total of 340 subjects aged 2-10 years were followed up for 1 year in India (study B). In study A, subjects were randomized in a 2:1 ratio, and in study B a 1:1 ratio to receive either PsA-TT or PsACWY. Immunogenicity was evaluated by measuring MenA serum bactericidal antibody (SBA) with rabbit complement and by a group A-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. RESULTS: In both studies, substantial SBA decay was observed at 6 months postvaccination in both vaccine groups, although more marked in the PsACWY group. At 1 year and 4 years (only for study A) postvaccination, SBA titers were relatively sustained in the PsA-TT group, whereas a slight increasing trend, more pronounced among the youngest, was observed in the participants aged <18 years in the PsACWY groups. The SBA titers were significantly higher in the PsA-TT group than in the PsACWY group at any time point, and the majority of subjects in the PsA-TT group had SBA titers ≥128 and group A-specific IgG concentrations ≥2 microg/mL at any point in time in both the African and Indian study populations. CONCLUSIONS: Four years after vaccination with a single dose of PsA-TT vaccine in Africa, most subjects are considered protected from MenA disease. CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION: PsA-TT-003 (ISRCTN87739946); PsA-TT-003a (ISRCTN46335400). |
A proteomic characterization of Bordetella pertussis clinical isolates associated with a California state pertussis outbreak
Williamson YM , Moura H , Whitmon J , Woolfitt AR , Schieltz DM , Rees JC , Guo S , Kirkham H , Bouck D , Ades EW , Tondella ML , Carlone GM , Sampson JS , Barr JR . Int J Proteomics 2015 2015 536537 Bordetella pertussis (Bp) is the etiologic agent of pertussis (whooping cough), a highly communicable infection. Although pertussis is vaccine preventable, in recent years there has been increased incidence, despite high vaccine coverage. Possible reasons for the rise in cases include the following: Bp strain adaptation, waning vaccine immunity, increased surveillance, and improved clinical diagnostics. A pertussis outbreak impacted California (USA) in 2010; children and preadolescents were the most affected but the burden of disease fell mainly on infants. To identify protein biomarkers associated with this pertussis outbreak, we report a whole cellular protein characterization of six Bp isolates plus the pertussis acellular vaccine strain Bp Tohama I (T), utilizing gel-free proteomics-based mass spectrometry (MS). MS/MS tryptic peptide detection and protein database searching combined with western blot analysis revealed three Bp isolates in this study had markedly reduced detection of pertactin (Prn), a subunit of pertussis acellular vaccines. Additionally, antibody affinity capture technologies were implemented using anti-Bp T rabbit polyclonal antisera and whole cellular proteins to identify putative immunogens. Proteome profiling could shed light on pathogenesis and potentially lay the foundation for reduced infection transmission strategies and improved clinical diagnostics. |
The impact of pre-existing antibody on subsequent immune responses to meningococcal A-containing vaccines
Idoko OT , Okolo SN , Plikaytis B , Akinsola A , Viviani S , Borrow R , Carlone G , Findlow H , Elie C , Kulkarni PS , Preziosi MP , Ota M , Kampmann B . Vaccine 2014 32 (33) 4220-7 Major epidemics of serogroup A meningococcal meningitis continue to affect the African meningitis belt. The development of an affordable conjugate vaccine against the disease became a priority for World Health Organization (WHO) in the late 1990s. Licensing of meningococcal vaccines has been based on serological correlates of protection alone, but such correlates might differ in different geographical regions. If high pre-vaccination antibody concentrations/titers impacts on the response to vaccination and possibly vaccine efficacy, is not clearly understood. We set out to define the pre-vaccination Meningococcal group A (Men A) antibody concentrations/titers in The Gambia and study their impact on the immunogenicity of Men A containing vaccines. Data from subjects originally enrolled in studies to test the safety and immunogenicity of the MenA vaccine recently developed for Africa meningococcal A polysaccharide conjugated to tetanus toxoid, MenAfriVac(R) (PsA-TT) were analyzed. Participants had been randomized to receive either the study vaccine PsA-TT or the reference quadrivalent plain polysaccharide vaccine containing meningococcal groups A, C, W, and Y, Mencevax(R) ACWY, GlaxoSmithKline (PsACWY) in a 2:1 ratio. Venous blood samples were collected before and 28 days after vaccination. Antibodies were assayed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for geometric mean concentrations and serum bactericidal antibody (SBA) for functional antibody. The inter age group differences were compared using ANOVA and the pre and post-vaccination differences by t test. Over 80% of the ≥19 year olds had pre-vaccination antibody concentrations above putatively protective concentrations as compared to only 10% of 1-2 year olds. Ninety-five percent of those who received the study vaccine had ≥4-fold antibody responses if they had low pre-vaccination concentrations compared to 76% of those with high pre-vaccination concentrations. All subjects with low pre-vaccination titers attained ≥4-fold responses as compared to 76% with high titers where study vaccine was received. Our data confirm the presence of high pre-vaccination Men A antibody concentrations/titers within the African meningitis belt, with significantly higher concentrations in older individuals. Although all participants had significant increase in antibody levels following vaccination, the four-fold or greater response in antibody titers were significantly higher in individuals with lower pre-existing antibody titers, especially after receiving PsA-TT. This finding may have some implications for vaccination strategies adopted in the future. |
Persistence of serogroup C antibody responses following quadrivalent meningococcal conjugate vaccination in United States military personnel
Patel M , Romero-Steiner S , Broderick MP , Thomas CG , Plikaytis BD , Schmidt DS , Johnson SE , Milton AS , Carlone GM , Clark TA , Messonnier NE , Cohn AC , Faix DJ . Vaccine 2014 32 (30) 3805-9 Serogroup C meningococcal (MenC) disease accounts for one-third of all meningococcal cases and causes meningococcal outbreaks in the U.S. Quadrivalent meningococcal vaccine conjugated to diphtheria toxoid (MenACYWD) was recommended in 2005 for adolescents and high risk groups such as military recruits. We evaluated anti-MenC antibody persistence in U.S. military personnel vaccinated with either MenACYWD or meningococcal polysaccharide vaccine (MPSV4). Twelve hundred subjects vaccinated with MenACYWD from 2006 to 2008 or MPSV4 from 2002 to 2004 were randomly selected from the Defense Medical Surveillance System. Baseline serologic responses to MenC were assessed in all subjects; 100 subjects per vaccine group were tested during one of the following six post-vaccination time-points: 5-7, 11-13, 17-19, 23-25, 29-31, or 35-37 months. Anti-MenC geometric mean titers (GMT) were measured by rabbit complement serum bactericidal assay (rSBA) and geometric mean concentrations (GMC) by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Continuous variables were compared using the Wilcoxon rank sum test and the proportion of subjects with an rSBA titer ≥8 by chi-square. Pre-vaccination rSBA GMT was <8 for the MenACWYD group. rSBA GMT increased to 703 at 5-7 months post-vaccination and decreased by 94% to 43 at 3 years post-vaccination. GMT was significantly lower in the MenACWYD group at 5-7 months post-vaccination compared to the MPSV4 group. The percentage of MenACWYD recipients achieving an rSBA titer of ≥8 decreased from 87% at 5-7 months to 54% at 3 years. There were no significant differences between vaccine groups in the proportion of subjects with a titer of ≥8 at any time-point. GMC for the MenACWYD group was 0.14mug/mL at baseline, 1.07mug/mL at 5-7 months, and 0.66mug/mL at 3 years, and significantly lower than the MPSV4 group at all time-points. Anti-MenC responses wane following vaccination with MenACYWD; a booster dose is needed to maintain protective levels of circulating antibody. |
Molecular signatures of antibody responses derived from a systems biology study of five human vaccines.
Li S , Rouphael N , Duraisingham S , Romero-Steiner S , Presnell S , Davis C , Schmidt DS , Johnson SE , Milton A , Rajam G , Kasturi S , Carlone GM , Quinn C , Chaussabel D , Palucka AK , Mulligan MJ , Ahmed R , Stephens DS , Nakaya HI , Pulendran B . Nat Immunol 2013 15 (2) 195-204 ![]() Many vaccines induce protective immunity via antibodies. Systems biology approaches have been used to determine signatures that can be used to predict vaccine-induced immunity in humans, but whether there is a 'universal signature' that can be used to predict antibody responses to any vaccine is unknown. Here we did systems analyses of immune responses to the polysaccharide and conjugate vaccines against meningococcus in healthy adults, in the broader context of published studies of vaccines against yellow fever virus and influenza virus. To achieve this, we did a large-scale network integration of publicly available human blood transcriptomes and systems-scale databases in specific biological contexts and deduced a set of transcription modules in blood. Those modules revealed distinct transcriptional signatures of antibody responses to different classes of vaccines, which provided key insights into primary viral, protein recall and anti-polysaccharide responses. Our results elucidate the early transcriptional programs that orchestrate vaccine immunity in humans and demonstrate the power of integrative network modeling. |
Absence of high molecular weight proteins 1 and/or 2 is associated with decreased adherence among non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae clinical isolates
Vuong J , Wang X , Theodore JM , Whitmon J , Gomez de Leon P , Mayer LW , Carlone GM , Romero-Steiner S . J Med Microbiol 2013 62 1649-56 ![]() High molecular weight (Hmw) proteins 1 and 2, type IV pilin protein (PilA), outer-membrane protein P5 (OmpP5), Haemophilus protein D (Hpd) and Haemophilus adhesive protein (Hap) are surface proteins involved in the adherence of non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae. One hundred clinical isolates were evaluated for the presence of the genes encoding these proteins by PCR and for their adherence capacity (AC) to Detroit 562 nasopharyngeal cells (D562). The majority of isolates were from blood (77/100); other sites were also represented. Confluent D562 monolayers (1.2x10(5) cells per well) were inoculated with standardized minimal infective doses (m.o.i.) of 10(2), 10(3) or 10(4) c.f.u. per well. The AC was categorized as low (<10 %) or high (≥10 %) depending on the percentage of c.f.u. adhering per well. All the isolates evaluated showed adherence: 69/100 (69 %) demonstrated high adherence, while 31/100 (31 %) showed low adherence. Of all the genes evaluated, hmw1A and/or hmw2A were detected in 69/100 (69 %) of isolates. The presence of hmw1A and/or hmw2A was associated with increased adherence to D562 cells (P≤0.001). Dot immunoblots were performed to detect protein expression using mAbs 3D6, AD6 and 10C5. Among the high-adherence isolates (n = 69), 72 % reacted with 3D6 and 21 % with 10C5. Our data indicate that the absence of Hmw1 and/or Hmw2 was associated with decreased adherence to D562 cells. |
Phenotypic, genomic, and transcriptional characterization of Streptococcus pneumoniae interacting with human pharyngeal cells.
Kimaro Mlacha SZ , Romero-Steiner S , Hotopp JC , Kumar N , Ishmael N , Riley DR , Farooq U , Creasy TH , Tallon LJ , Liu X , Goldsmith CS , Sampson J , Carlone GM , Hollingshead SK , Scott JA , Tettelin H . BMC Genomics 2013 14 383 ![]() BACKGROUND: Streptococcus pneumoniae is a leading cause of childhood morbidity and mortality worldwide, despite the availability of effective pneumococcal vaccines. Understanding the molecular interactions between the bacterium and the host will contribute to the control and prevention of pneumococcal disease. RESULTS: We used a combination of adherence assays, mutagenesis and functional genomics to identify novel factors involved in adherence. By contrasting these processes in two pneumococcal strains, TIGR4 and G54, we showed that adherence and invasion capacities vary markedly by strain. Electron microscopy showed more adherent bacteria in association with membranous pseudopodia in the TIGR4 strain. Operons for cell wall phosphorylcholine incorporation (lic), manganese transport (psa) and phosphate utilization (phn) were up-regulated in both strains on exposure to epithelial cells. Pneumolysin, pili, stress protection genes (adhC-czcD) and genes of the type II fatty acid synthesis pathway were highly expressed in the naturally more invasive strain, TIGR4. Deletion mutagenesis of five gene regions identified as regulated in this study revealed attenuation in adherence. Most strikingly, SP_1922 which was predicted to contain a B-cell epitope and revealed significant attenuation in adherence, appeared to be expressed as a part of an operon that includes the gene encoding the cytoplasmic pore-forming toxin and vaccine candidate, pneumolysin. CONCLUSION: This work identifies a list of novel potential pneumococcal adherence determinants. |
Immunogenicity and safety of a new meningococcal A conjugate vaccine in Indian children aged 2-10 years: a phase II/III double-blind randomized controlled trial
Hirve S , Bavdekar A , Pandit A , Juvekar S , Patil M , Preziosi MP , Tang Y , Marchetti E , Martellet L , Findlow H , Elie C , Parulekar V , Plikaytis B , Borrow R , Carlone G , Kulkarni PS , Goel A , Suresh K , Beri S , Kapre S , Jadhav S , Preaud JM , Viviani S , Laforce FM . Vaccine 2012 30 (45) 6456-60 This study compares the immunogenicity and safety of a single dose of a new meningococcal A conjugate vaccine (PsA-TT, MenAfriVac, Serum Institute of India Ltd., Pune) against the meningococcal group A component of a licensed quadrivalent meningococcal polysaccharide vaccine (PsACWY, Mencevax ACWY((R)), GSK, Belgium) 28 days after vaccination in Indian children. This double-blind, randomized, controlled study included 340 Indian children aged 2-10 years enrolled from August to October 2007; 169 children received a dose of PsA-TT while 171 children received a dose of PsACWY. Intention-to-treat analysis showed that 95.2% of children in PsA-TT group had a ≥4-fold response in serum bactericidal titers (rSBA) 28 days post vaccination as compared to 78.2% in the PsACWY group. A significantly higher rSBA GMT (11,209, 95%CI 9708-12,942) was noted in the PsA-TT group when compared to PsACWY group (2838, 95%CI 2368-3401). Almost all children in both vaccine groups had a ≥4-fold response in group A-specific IgG concentration but the IgG GMC was significantly greater in the PsA-TT group (89.1mug/ml, 95%CI 75.5-105.0) when compared to the PsACWY group (15.3mug/ml, 95%CI 12.3-19.2). Local and systemic reactions during the 4 days after immunization were similar for both vaccine groups except for tenderness (30.2% in PsA-TT group vs 12.3% in PsACWY group). None of the adverse events or serious adverse events was related to the study vaccines. We conclude that MenAfriVac is well tolerated and significantly more immunogenic when compared to a licensed polysaccharide vaccine, in 2-to-10-year-old Indian children. |
Interlaboratory standardization of the sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay designed for MATS, a rapid, reproducible method for estimating the strain coverage of investigational vaccines
Plikaytis BD , Stella M , Boccadifuoco G , Detora LM , Agnusdei M , Santini L , Brunelli B , Orlandi L , Simmini I , Giuliani M , Ledroit M , Hong E , Taha MK , Ellie K , Rajam G , Carlone GM , Claus H , Vogel U , Borrow R , Findlow J , Gilchrist S , Stefanelli P , Fazio C , Carannante A , Oksnes J , Fritzsonn E , Klem AM , Caugant DA , Abad R , Vazquez JA , Rappuoli R , Pizza M , Donnelly JJ , Medini D . Clin Vaccine Immunol 2012 19 (10) 1609-17 The meningococcal antigen typing system (MATS) sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was designed to measure the immunologic cross-reactivity and quantity of antigens in target strains of a pathogen. It was first used to measure the factor H-binding protein (fHbp), neisserial adhesin A (NadA), and neisserial heparin-binding antigen (NHBA) content of serogroup B meningococcal (MenB) isolates relative to a reference strain, or "relative potency" (RP). With the PorA genotype, the RPs were then used to assess strain coverage by 4CMenB, a multicomponent MenB vaccine. In preliminary studies, MATS accurately predicted killing in the serum bactericidal assay using human complement, an accepted correlate of protection for meningococcal vaccines. A study across seven laboratories assessed the reproducibility of RPs for fHbp, NadA, and NHBA and established qualification parameters for new laboratories. RPs were determined in replicate for 17 MenB reference strains at laboratories A to G. The reproducibility of RPs among laboratories and against consensus values across laboratories was evaluated using a mixed-model analysis of variance. Interlaboratory agreement was very good; the Pearson correlation coefficients, coefficients of accuracy, and concordance correlation coefficients exceeded 99%. The summary measures of reproducibility, expressed as between-laboratory coefficients of variation, were 7.85% (fHbp), 16.51% (NadA), and 12.60% (NHBA). The overall within-laboratory measures of variation adjusted for strain and laboratory were 19.8% (fHbp), 28.8% (NHBA), and 38.3% (NadA). The MATS ELISA was successfully transferred to six laboratories, and a further laboratory was successfully qualified. |
Measurement of Haemophilus influenzae type a capsular polysaccharide antibodies in cord blood sera
Schmidt DS , Bieging KT , Gomez-de-Leon P , Villasenor-Sierra A , Inostroza J , Robbins JB , Schneerson R , Carlone GM , Romero-Steiner S . Pediatr Infect Dis J 2012 31 (8) 876-8 We measured anti-Hia capsular polysaccharide serum immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies in cord blood sera from Mexican (n=68) and Chilean mothers (n=72) by ELISA. Measurable antibodies were found in 79.3% of samples. IgG antibodies correlated with serum bactericidal activity (r=0.66). This ELISA can be used for the evaluation of adaptive immune responses to Hia and sero-surveillance studies in populations at risk. |
A gel-free proteomic-based method for the characterization of Bordetella pertussis clinical isolates
Williamson YM , Moura H , Simmons K , Whitmon J , Melnick N , Rees J , Woolfitt A , Schieltz DM , Tondella ML , Ades E , Sampson J , Carlone G , Barr JR . J Microbiol Methods 2012 90 (2) 119-33 ![]() Bordetella pertussis (Bp) is the etiologic agent of pertussis or whooping cough, a highly contagious respiratory disease occurring primarily in infants and young children. Although vaccine preventable, pertussis cases have increased over the years leading researchers to re-evaluate vaccine control strategies. Since bacterial outer membrane proteins, comprising the surfaceome, often play roles in pathogenesis and antibody-mediated immunity, three recent Bp circulating isolates were examined using proteomics to identify any potential changes in surface protein expression. Fractions enriched for outer membrane proteins were digested with trypsin and the peptides analyzed by nano liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (nLC-ESI-MS), followed by database analysis to elucidate the surfaceomes of our three Bp isolates. Furthermore, a less labor intensive non-gel based antibody affinity capture technology in conjunction with MS was employed to assess each Bp strains' immunogenic outer membrane proteins. This novel technique is generally applicable allowing for the identification of immunogenic surface expressed proteins on pertussis and other pathogenic bacteria. |
A rapid method for capture and identification of immunogenic proteins in Bordetella pertussis enriched membranes fractions: a fast-track strategy applicable to other microorganisms
West R , Whitmon J , Williamson YM , Moura H , Nelson M , Melnick N , Tondella ML , Schieltz D , Rees J , Woolfitt AR , Barr JR , Ades EW , Carlone GM , Sampson JS . J Proteomics 2012 75 (6) 1966-72 ![]() Mass spectrometry (MS) coupled with 1-D and 2-D electrophoresis can be utilized to detect and identify immunogenic proteins, but these methods are laborious and time-consuming. We describe an alternative, simple, rapid gel-free strategy to identify multiple immunogenic proteins from Bordetella pertussis (Bp). It couples immunoprecipitation to nano liquid chromatography- tandem mass spectrometry (IP-nLC-MS/MS) and is significantly both time- and labor-saving. We developed a gel-free magnetic bead-based immunoprecipitation (IP) method using different NP-40/PBS concentrations in which solubilized proteins of Bp Tohama I membrane fractions were precipitated with polyclonal rabbit anti-Bp whole cell immune sera. Immune complexes were analyzed by MS and Scaffold analysis (>95% protein identification probability). Total immunoproteins identified were 50, 63 and 49 for 0.90%, 0.45% and 0.22% NP-40/PBS buffer concentrations respectively. Known Bp proteins identified included pertactin, serotype 2 fimbrial subunit and filamentous hemagglutinin. As proof of concept that this gel-free protein immunoprecipitation method enabled the capture of multiple immunogenic proteins, IP samples were also analyzed by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting. Bypassing gels and subjecting immunoprecipitated proteins directly to MS is a simple and rapid antigen identification method with relatively high throughput. IP-nLC-MS/MS provides a novel alternative approach for current methods used for the identification of immunogenic proteins. |
Establishment of a new human pneumococcal standard reference serum, 007sp
Goldblatt D , Plikaytis BD , Akkoyunlu M , Antonello J , Ashton L , Blake M , Burton R , Care R , Durant N , Feavers I , Fernsten P , Fievet F , Giardina P , Jansen K , Katz L , Kierstead L , Lee L , Lin J , Maisonneuve J , Nahm MH , Raab J , Romero-Steiner S , Rose C , Schmidt D , Stapleton J , Carlone GM . Clin Vaccine Immunol 2011 18 (10) 1728-36 Lot 89SF has been the reference standard serum pool used in pneumococcal enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) since 1990. In 2005, it was estimated that there remained between 2 and 5 years' supply of lot 89SF. Since lot 89SF was the reference standard used in the evaluation of the seven-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine Prevnar (PCV7), the link to clinical efficacy would be severed if stocks became completely depleted. Furthermore, demonstration of immune responses comparable to those elicited by PCV7 is a licensure approach used for new pneumococcal conjugate vaccines, so a replacement reference standard was required. A total of 278 volunteers were immunized with the 23-valent unconjugated polysaccharide vaccine Pneumovax II, and a unit of blood was obtained twice within 120 days following immunization. Plasma was prepared, pooled, and confirmed to be free from hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV), and HIV. The pooled serum was poured at 6 ml per vial into 15,333 vials and lyophilized. Immunological bridging of 007sp to 89SF was used to establish equivalent reference values for 13 pneumococcal capsular serotypes (1, 3, 4, 5, 6A, 6B, 7F, 9V, 14, 18C, 19A, 19F and 23F) by five independent laboratories. Antibody concentrations in 007sp were established relative to the lot 89SF reference preparation using the WHO reference ELISA. Subsequently, 12 existing WHO calibration sera had concentrations reassigned for 13 pneumococcal serotypes using new serum 007sp as the reference, and these were compared to concentrations relative to the original reference serum. Agreement was excellent for the 12 WHO calibration sera. The 007sp preparation has replaced 89SF as the pneumococcal reference standard. Sufficient quantity of this new preparation is available such that, with judicious use, it should be available for at least 25 years. |
Immunogenicity and safety of a meningococcal A conjugate vaccine in Africans
Sow SO , Okoko BJ , Diallo A , Viviani S , Borrow R , Carlone G , Tapia M , Akinsola AK , Arduin P , Findlow H , Elie C , Haidara FC , Adegbola RA , Diop D , Parulekar V , Chaumont J , Martellet L , Diallo F , Idoko OT , Tang Y , Plikaytis BD , Kulkarni PS , Marchetti E , LaForce FM , Preziosi MP . N Engl J Med 2011 364 (24) 2293-304 BACKGROUND: Group A meningococci are the source of major epidemics of meningitis in Africa. An affordable, highly immunogenic meningococcal A conjugate vaccine is needed. METHODS: We conducted two studies in Africa to evaluate a new MenA conjugate vaccine (PsA-TT). In study A, 601 children, 12 to 23 months of age, were randomly assigned to receive PsA-TT, a quadrivalent polysaccharide reference vaccine (PsACWY), or a control vaccine (Haemophilus influenzae type b conjugate vaccine [Hib-TT]). Ten months later, these children underwent another round of randomization within each group to receive a full dose of PsA-TT, a one-fifth dose of PsACWY, or a full dose of Hib-TT, with 589 of the original participants receiving a booster dose. In study B, 900 subjects between 2 and 29 years of age were randomly assigned to receive PsA-TT or PsACWY. Safety and reactogenicity were evaluated, and immunogenicity was assessed by measuring the activity of group A serum bactericidal antibody (SBA) with rabbit complement and performing an IgG group A-specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. RESULTS: In study A, 96.0% of the subjects in the PsA-TT group and 63.7% of those in the PsACWY group had SBA titers that were at least four times as high as those at baseline; in study B, 78.2% of the subjects in the PsA-TT group and 46.2% of those in the PsACWY group had SBA titers that were at least four times as high as those at baseline. The geometric mean SBA titers in the PsA-TT groups in studies A and B were greater by factors of 16 and 3, respectively, than they were in the PsACWY groups (P<0.001). In study A, the PsA-TT group had higher antibody titers at week 40 than the PsACWY group and had obvious immunologic memory after receiving a polysaccharide booster vaccine. Safety profiles were similar across vaccine groups, although PsA-TT recipients were more likely than PsACWY recipients to have tenderness and induration at the vaccination site. Adverse events were consistent with age-specific morbidity in the study areas; no serious vaccine-related adverse events were reported. CONCLUSIONS: The PsA-TT vaccine elicited a stronger response to group A antibody than the PsACWY vaccine. (Funded by the Meningitis Vaccine Project through a grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; Controlled-Trials.com numbers, ISRCTN78147026 and ISRCTN87739946.). |
Evaluation of serum bactericidal antibody assays for Haemophilus influenzae serotype a
Rouphael NG , Satola S , Farley MM , Rudolph K , Schmidt DS , Gomez-de-Leon P , Robbins JB , Schneerson R , Carlone GM , Romero-Steiner S . Clin Vaccine Immunol 2010 18 (2) 243-7 Haemophilus influenzae type a (Hia) is an important pathogen for some American Indian, Alaskan natives and Northern Canada aboriginal populations. Assays to measure serum bactericidal activity (SBA) to Hia have not been developed or validated. Here we describe two methods for the measurement of SBA: SBA with a viability end-point (CFU counts) and SBA with a fluorometric end-point using alamarBlue as metabolic indicator. Both SBA assays measure Hia-specific functional antibody and correlate with anti-Hia IgG ELISA concentration of naturally-acquired antibodies. |
Multilaboratory comparison of Streptococcus pneumoniae opsonophagocytic killing assays and their level of agreement for the determination of functional antibody activity in human reference sera
Rose CE , Romero-Steiner S , Burton RL , Carlone GM , Goldblatt D , Nahm MH , Ashton L , Haston M , Ekstrom N , Haikala R , Kayhty H , Henckaerts I , Durant N , Poolman JT , Fernsten P , Yu X , Hu BT , Jansen KU , Blake M , Simonetti E , Hermans PW , Plikaytis BD . Clin Vaccine Immunol 2010 18 (1) 135-42 Antibody mediated killing of Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) by phagocytes is an important mechanism of protection of the human host against pneumococcal infections. Measurement of opsonophagocytic antibodies using a standardized opsonophagocytic assay (OPA) is important for the evaluation of candidate vaccines and a requirement for the licensure of new pneumococcal conjugate vaccine formulations. We assessed agreement among six laboratories that used their own optimized OPAs on a panel of 16 human reference sera for 13 pneumococcal serotypes. Consensus titers, estimated using an analysis of variance (ANOVA) mixed-effects model, provided a common reference to assess agreement among these laboratories. Agreement was evaluated using assay accuracy, reproducibility, repeatability, precision and bias. We also reviewed four acceptance criteria intervals for assessing the comparability of protocols when assaying the same reference sera. The precision, accuracy and concordance results among laboratories and the consensus titers revealed acceptable agreement. Results of this study indicate that the bioassays evaluated in this study are robust and the resultant OPA values are reproducible for the determination of functional antibody titers specific to 13 pneumococcal serotypes when performed by laboratories using highly standardized but not identical assays. The statistical methodologies employed in this study may serve as a template to evaluate future multilaboratory studies. |
P4 peptide therapy rescues aged mice from fatal pneumococcal sepsis
Rajam G , Bangert M , Hammons GM , Melnick N , Carlone GM , Sampson JS , Ades EW . Clin Vaccine Immunol 2010 17 (11) 1823-4 Many studies suggest that with aging, immune capabilities gradually diminish, leading to a decrease in antibody production, cytokines, and various effector cells (1-4). In this study, we examined the effects of an immune-enhancing peptide on aged mice. P4, a 28-amino-acid cationic peptide derived from pneumococcal surface adhesin A (PsaA), is a eukaryotic cellular activator (10). Previously, we demonstrated that the cellular activation properties of P4 can be utilized to rescue severely ill young mice from fatal pneumococcal infection in the presence of pathogen-specific antibodies and active complement (8, 12). While P4 therapy was used to rescue young Swiss Webster mice (6 to 10 weeks old), we questioned its effectiveness in aged mice (11 and 15 months old). | Intranasal inoculation of mice with Streptococcus pneumoniae WU2 (serotype 3) and P4 therapy were done using protocols previously described, with minor modifications (12). Eleven-month-old BALB/c (n = 20) and 15-month-old Swiss Webster mice (n = 20) were infected intranasally with S. pneumoniae WU2 (∼2.1 × 107 cells/mouse). Mice were monitored and visually scored twice daily for moribund characteristics as previously described (12). At 48 h postchallenge, 80% (16/20) were moribund. Moribund mice were divided into a control (n = 8) and a treatment group (n = 8). Two doses of P4 therapy with pathogen-specific antibody (intravenous immunoglobulin [IVIG]; Gamunex, Telecris, NC) and P4 were administered intravenously (postinfection) in the treatment group. Treated and untreated animals were monitored for 166 h, and the data computed for significant differences among various groups using a t test for paired samples for the means (MS Excel 2007). |
An augmented passive immune therapy to treat fulminant bacterial infections
Rajam G , Sampson J , Carlone GM , Ades EW . Recent Pat Antiinfect Drug Discov 2010 5 (2) 157-67 In the early 1900s, passive immunization/antibody therapy was used to treat a variety of human ailments such as hypoimmunoglobulinemia, cancer and infectious disease. The advent of antibiotic therapy had relegated this type of therapy obsolete for treatment of infectious diseases. Emergence of multi-drug resistant pathogens along with novel monoclonal antibody production techniques has rekindled the interest in passive immunization (PI). An increase in the number of monoclonal antibody patent applications in the recent past suggests a renewed commercial interest in PI. Despite these developments, antibody therapy for infectious diseases has limitations including the need for large or frequent dosages. P4, a 28-amino acid peptide is a multi-lineage cellular activator. P4, along with infectious disease (i.e. Pathogen) specific immunoglobulin, has been shown in vitro and in vivo in mice to potentiate innate immunity. This review will discuss the progress made in passive antibody therapy, the challenges still to be surmounted, and the potential expanded role of an immune-potentiating peptide (bio-molecule) in the quest to utilize and revitalize passive immunization. |
Mass spectrometric analysis of multiple pertussis toxins and toxoids
Williamson YM , Moura H , Schieltz D , Rees J , Woolfitt AR , Pirkle JL , Sampson JS , Tondella ML , Ades E , Carlone G , Barr JR . J Biomed Biotechnol 2010 2010 942365 Bordetella pertussis (Bp) is the causative agent of pertussis, a vaccine preventable disease occurring primarily in children. In recent years, there has been increased reporting of pertussis. Current pertussis vaccines are acellular and consist of Bp proteins including the major virulence factor pertussis toxin (Ptx), a 5-subunit exotoxin. Variation in Ptx subunit amino acid (AA) sequence could possibly affect the immune response. A blind comparative mass spectrometric (MS) analysis of commercially available Ptx as well as the chemically modified toxoid (Ptxd) from licensed vaccines was performed to assess peptide sequence and AA coverage variability as well as relative amounts of Ptx subunits. Qualitatively, there are similarities among the various sources based on AA percent coverages and MS/MS fragmentation profiles. Additionally, based on a label-free mass spectrometry-based quantification method there is differential relative abundance of the subunits among the sources. |
Advances in the development of vaccines against Neisseria meningitidis
Tan LK , Carlone GM , Borrow R . N Engl J Med 2010 362 (16) 1511-20 Although two centuries have passed since Vieusseux described epidemic meningococcal disease, (1) Neisseria meningitidis remains a leading cause of meningitis and sepsis. Overwhelming meningococcal disease can develop rapidly and is associated with mortality rates exceeding 20%. (2)Thus, efforts to control the disease have focused on vaccination. In the past, vaccines against meningococcal disease have failed to provide immunogenicity and long-term protection in infants, who are at greatest risk. Although recent vaccines have improved coverage for this age group, there is still no broadly effective vaccine against N. meningitidis group B (NMB), now the predominant disease-causing isolate in industrialized countries. |
Concomitant administration of recombinant PsaA and PCV7 reduces Streptococcus pneumoniae serotype 19A colonization in a murine model
Whaley MJ , Sampson JS , Johnson SE , Rajam G , Stinson-Parks A , Holder P , Mauro E , Romero-Steiner S , Carlone GM , Ades EW . Vaccine 2010 28 (18) 3071-5 A murine colonization model was used to determine the effect of co-administering 7-valent polysaccharide-protein conjugate vaccine and pneumococcal surface adhesin A. Mice were challenged intranasally with either PCV7 serotypes, 4 or 14, or a non-PCV7 serotype, 19A. Post-challenge samples were evaluated for IgG antibody levels, opsonophagocytic activity, and nasopharyngeal colonization. No interference was observed between immune responses from the concomitant and individual immunizations. Concomitant immunizations reduced carriage for tested serotypes; largest reduction was observed for 19A. From these mouse studies, co-administering pneumococcal antigens appear to expand coverage and reduce colonization against a non-PCV7 serotype without inhibiting immunogenicity to other serotypes. |
An interlaboratory comparison of three multiplexed bead-based immunoassays for measuring serum antibodies to pneumococcal polysaccharides
Whaley MJ , Rose C , Martinez J , Laher G , Sammons DL , Smith JP , Snawder JE , Borrow R , Biagini RE , Plikaytis B , Carlone GM , Romero-Steiner S . Clin Vaccine Immunol 2010 17 (5) 862-9 Serotype-specific IgG, as quantified by a standardized WHO ELISA, is a serologic end-point used to evaluate pneumococcal polysaccharide-based vaccine immunogenicity. Antibodies to each vaccine polysaccharide in licensed multivalent vaccines are quantified separately; this is laborious and consumes serum. We compared three bead-based immunoassays, a commercial assay (xMAP(R)Pneumo14, Luminex) and two in-house assays (Health Protection Agency [HPA] and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC]) using WHO recommended standard reference and reference sera (n=11) from vaccinated adults. Multiple comparisons of the IgG concentrations for seven conjugate vaccine serotypes were performed by sample (percent error), serotype (equivalency testing), and laboratory (concordance correlation coefficient [CCC]). When comparing concentrations by sample, bead-based immunoassays generally yielded higher antibody concentrations than ELISA and had higher variability for serotypes 6B, 18C, and 23F. None of the three assays met the current WHO recommendation of 75% of sera falling within +/-40% of the assigned antibody concentrations for all seven serotypes. When compared by serotype, CDC and HPA were equivalent for 5 of 7 serotypes, whereas Luminex was equivalent for 4 of 7 serotypes. When overall mean IgG concentrations were compared by laboratories, a higher level of agreement, CCC close to 1, was found among bead-based immunoassays than between the assays and WHO assignments. When compared to WHO assignments, the HPA assay out performed (r = 0.920, rc = 0.894, Ca = 0.972) the other assays. Additional testing with sera from immunogenicity studies should demonstrate the applicability of this methodology for vaccine evaluation. |
Revaccination with a 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine induces elevated and persistent functional antibody responses in adults aged 65 > or = years
Manoff SB , Liss C , Caulfield MJ , Marchese RD , Silber J , Boslego J , Romero-Steiner S , Rajam G , Glass NE , Whitney CG , Carlone GM . J Infect Dis 2010 201 (4) 525-33 BACKGROUND: Older adults are at high risk of developing invasive pneumococcal disease, but the optimal timing and number of vaccine doses needed to prevent disease among this group are unknown. We compared revaccination with 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine (PN23) with primary vaccination for eliciting initial and persistent functional antibody responses. METHODS: Subjects aged > or = 65 years were enrolled. Functional (opsonic) and total immunoglobulin (Ig) G antibody levels were measured following either PN23 primary vaccination (n = 60) or revaccination 3-5 years after receiving a first PN23 vaccination (n = 60). Antibody against vaccine serotypes 4, 14, and 23F was measured at prevaccination (day 0), 30 days after vaccination, and 5 years after vaccination. RESULTS: By day 30, both primary vaccination and revaccination induced significant increases in opsonic and IgG antibody levels. Day 30 levels following revaccination were slightly lower but not significantly different than those after primary vaccination. Year 5 levels were similar in both groups and remained significantly higher than prevaccination levels for primary vaccination subjects. There was good agreement between postvaccination opsonic and IgG antibody levels. CONCLUSIONS: Revaccination of older adults with PN23 was comparable to primary vaccination for inducing elevated and persistent functional and IgG antibody responses. |
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