AI Article Synopsis

  • Leptospira spirochetes cause leptospirosis, and existing vaccines mainly target LPS antigens, creating a need for new vaccine approaches.
  • The study developed whole-cell vaccines with reduced LPS and maintained protein exposure, testing them on hamsters to determine their protective capacity against various serovars.
  • Results indicated that while some vaccines offered full protection against homologous strains, protection was variable with heterologous strains, highlighting the potential of bivalent formulations with reduced LPS for effective leptospirosis prevention.

Article Abstract

Pathogenic spirochetes from genus Leptospira are etiologic agents of leptospirosis. Cellular vaccines against Leptospira infection often elicit mainly response against the LPS antigen of the serovars present in the formulation. There is no suitable protein candidate capable of replacing whole-cell vaccines, thus requiring new approaches on vaccine development to improve leptospirosis prevention. Our goal was to develop a whole-cell vaccine sorovar-independent based on LPS removal and conservation of protein antigens exposure, to evaluate the protective capacity of monovalent or bivalent vaccines against homologous and heterologous virulent Leptospira in hamster. Leptospire were subjected to heat inactivation, or to LPS extraction with butanol and in some cases further inactivation with formaldehyde. Hamsters were immunized and challenged with homologous or heterologous virulent serovars, blood and organs were collected from the survivors for bacterial quantification, chemokine evaluation, and analysis of sera antibody reactivity and cross-reactivity by Western blot. Immunization with either heated or low LPS vaccines with serovar Copenhageni or Canicola resulted in 100% protection of the animals challenged with homologous virulent bacteria. Notably, different from the whole-cell vaccine, the low LPS vaccines produced with serovar Canicola provided only partial protection in heterologous challenge with the virulent Copenhageni serovar. Immunization with bivalent formulation results in 100% protection of immunized animals challenged with virulent serovar Canicola. All vaccines produced were able to eliminate bacteria from the kidney of challenged animals. All the vaccines raised antibodies capable to recognize antigens of serovars not present in the vaccine formulation. Transcripts of IFNγ, CXCL16, CCL5, CXCL10, CXCR6, and CCR5, increased in all immunized animals. Conclusion: Our results showed that bivalent vaccines with reduced LPS may be an interesting strategy for protection against heterologous virulent serovars. Besides the desirable multivalent protection, the low LPS vaccines are specially promising due to the expected lower reatogenicity.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7100938PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0230460PLOS

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

heterologous virulent
12
low lps
12
lps vaccines
12
vaccines
9
vaccine development
8
lps
8
based lps
8
lps removal
8
whole-cell vaccine
8
bivalent vaccines
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!