| Literature DB >> 22895510 |
Y Sun1, W Shi, J Y Yang, D H Zhou, Y Q Chen, Y Zhang, Y Yang, B X He, M H Zhong, Y M Li, Y Cao, Y Xiao, W Li, J Yu, Y H Li, M W Fan, H M Yan.
Abstract
We previously demonstrated that an anti-caries DNA vaccine intranasally administered with recombinant flagellin protein as a mucosal adjuvant enhanced salivary IgA response and conferred better protection against caries. However, the relatively weak immunogenicity of DNA vaccines and the necessity for a large quantity of antigens remain significant challenges. Here, we fused the flagellin derived from E. coli (KF) and target antigen PAc containing the A-P fragment of PAc from S. mutans (rPAc) to produce a single recombinant protein (KF-rPAc). The abilities of KF-rPAc to induce rPAc-specific mucosal and systemic responses and protective efficiency against caries following intranasal immunization were compared with those of rPAc alone or a mixture of rPAc and KF (KF + rPAc) in rats. Results showed that KF-rPAc promoted significantly higher rPAc-specific antibodies in serum as well as in saliva than did an equivalent dose of rPAc alone or a mixture of KF + rPAc. Intranasal immunization of 8.5 µg KF-rPAc could achieve 64.2% reduction of dental caries in rats. In conclusion, our study demonstrated that flagellin and PAc fusion strategy is promising for anti-caries vaccine development, and KF-rPAc could be used as an anti-caries mucosal vaccine.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22895510 DOI: 10.1177/0022034512457684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dent Res ISSN: 0022-0345 Impact factor: 6.116