An unnatural amino acid dependent, conditional Pseudomonas vaccine prevents bacterial infection.
Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Live vaccines are ideal for inducing immunity but suffer from the need to attenuate their pathogenicity or replication to preclude the possibility of escape. Unnatural amino acids (UAAs) provide a strategy to engineer stringent auxotrophies, yielding conditionally replication incompetent live bacteria with excellent safety profiles. Here, we engineer Pseudomonas aeruginosa to maintain auxotrophy for the UAA p-benzoyl-L-phenylalanine (BzF) through its incorporation into the essential protein DnaN. In vivo evolution using an Escherichia coli-based two-hybrid selection system enabled engineering of a mutant DnaN homodimeric interface completely dependent on a BzF-specific interaction. This engineered strain, Pa Vaccine, exhibits undetectable escape frequency (<10-11) and shows excellent safety in naïve mice. Animals vaccinated via intranasal or intraperitoneal routes are protected from lethal challenge with pathogenic P. aeruginosa PA14. These results establish UAA-auxotrophic bacteria as promising candidates for bacterial vaccine therapy and outline a platform for expanding this technology to diverse bacterial pathogens.
SUBMITTER: Pigula M
PROVIDER: S-EPMC11310302 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Aug
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
ACCESS DATA