Genetic modification of the O-polysaccharide of Francisella tularensis results in an avirulent live attenuated vaccine.
Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Francisella tularensis, the causative agent of tularemia, is a highly virulent microbe. One significant virulence factor of F. tularensis is the O-polysaccharide (O-PS) portion of the organism's lipopolysaccharide.A wzy (O-antigen polymerase) deletion mutant of Ft. live attenuated vaccine strain (Ft.LVS), designated Ft.LVS::?wzy, was created and evaluated as a live attenuated vaccine. Specifically, the mutant's virulence potential and its protective efficacy against type A and type B strains were investigated by challenge of immunized mice.F. tularensis LVS::?wzy expressed only 1 repeating unit of O-PS and yet, upon immunization, induced O-PS-specific antibodies. Compared with Ft.LVS, the mutant was highly sensitive to complement-mediated lysis, significantly attenuated in virulence, and was recovered in much lower numbers from the organs of infected mice. Intranasal immunization with Ft.LVS::?wzy provided protection against subsequent intranasal infection with the highly virulent type A strain SchuS4 and with Ft.LVS. Immunization with Ft.LVS::?wzy elicited both humoral and cell-mediated immunity.Ft.LVS::?wzy was avirulent in mice and, despite expressing only 1 repeating unit of the O-PS, induced antibodies to the full-length O-PS. Vaccination with Ft.LVS::?wzy protected mice against intranasal challenge with both type A and type B strains of F. tularensis and induced functional immunity through both humoral and cellular mechanisms.
SUBMITTER: Kim TH
PROVIDER: S-EPMC3295600 | biostudies-literature | 2012 Apr
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
ACCESS DATA