| Literature DB >> 25072030 |
Elise A Lamont1, Adel M Talaat2, Paul M Coussens3, John P Bannantine4, Yrjo T Grohn5, Robab Katani6, Ling-ling Li6, Vivek Kapur6, Srinand Sreevatsan7.
Abstract
Vaccination remains a major tool for prevention and progression of Johne's disease, a chronic enteritis of ruminants worldwide. Currently there is only one licensed vaccine within the United States and two vaccines licensed internationally against Johne's disease. All licensed vaccines reduce fecal shedding of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP) and delay disease progression. However, there are no available vaccines that prevent disease onset. A joint effort by the Johne's Disease Integrated Program (JDIP), a USDA-funded consortium, and USDA-APHIS/VS sought to identify transposon insertion mutant strains as vaccine candidates in part of a three phase study. The focus of the Phase I study was to evaluate MAP mutant attenuation in a well-defined in vitro bovine monocyte-derived macrophage (MDM) model. Attenuation was determined by colony forming unit (CFUs) counts and slope estimates. Based on CFU counts alone, the MDM model did not identify any mutant that significantly differed from the wild-type control, MAP K-10. Slope estimates using mixed models approach identified six mutants as being attenuated. These were enrolled in protection studies involving murine and baby goat vaccination-challenge models. MDM based approach identified trends in attenuation but this did not correlate with protection in a natural host model. These results suggest the need for alternative strategies for Johne's disease vaccine candidate screening and evaluation.Entities:
Keywords: Johne's disease; Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis; macrophage; mutant; survival; transposon mutagenesis; vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25072030 PMCID: PMC4075333 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2014.00087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
MAP mutant identification, strain information, and slope estimates.
| 311 | Δ 482-3 | 43432-02 (Goat) | MAP0482 and MAP0483 | Site directed deletion (McGarvey, unpublished) | −0.0421 |
| 312 | K10-Δ | K-10 (Cattle) | Phage/site directed (Park et al., | 0.0270 | |
| 313 | K10-Δ | K-10 | 0.0294 | ||
| 314 | K10-Δ | K-10 | 0.0336 | ||
| 315 | STM68 (GPM401) | K-10 | Internal to MAP1566, insertion is located near the 3' end | Transposon mutagenesis; phAE94 to introduce Tn5370 (Liveneh et al., | −0.0265 |
| 316 | 2E11 (GPM402) | K-10 | Intergenic, 137 bp upstream from | Transposon mutagenesis; phAE94 to introduce Tn5367 (Liveneh et al., | −0.0211 |
| 317 | 22F4 (GPM403) | K-10 | Internal to | 0.0003 | |
| 318 | 40A9 (GPM404) | K-10 | Intergenic, between MAP0282c and MAP0283c | −0.018 | |
| 319 | 30H9 (GPM405) | K-10 | Internal to MAP1566 | −0.0146 | |
| 320 | 3H4 (GPM406) | K-10 | Intergenic, between MAP2296c and MAP2297c | 0.0186 | |
| 321 | 4H2 (GPM407) | K-10 | Intergenic between MAP1150c and MAP1151c | −0.0130 | |
| 322 | WAg906 (TM58) | 989 (C strain; Type II) | MAP1566 | Transposon mutagenesis (Tn5367) (Cavaignac et al., | 0.0038 |
| 323 | WAg915 | K-10 | Site directed mutagenesis using a phage vector | 0.0236 | |
| 324 | ATCC 19698 | MAP0997c | Transposon mutagenesis (Tn5367) (Shin et al., | −0.0025 | |
| 325 | K-10 | Δ | Homologous recombination (Wu et al., | 0.0043 | |
| 326 | ATCC 19698 | MAP3963 | Transposon mutagenesis (Tn5367) (Shin et al., | −0.0284 | |
| 329 | ATCC 19698 | MAP2408c | Transposon mutagenesis (Tn 5367) (Wu et al., | 0.0198 | |
Slope-estimates based-off of data recorded from the University of Minnesota and the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Figure 1Survival of MAP mutants in a primary cell . All MAP mutant inoculums were normalized to that from MAP strain K-10. Bovine MDMs were incubated at 3, 24, 48, 96, and 168 h. and subsequently lysed for MAP CFU culture. MAP mutant CFU counts did not differ significantly from the control, MAP strain K-10. Error bars represents standard error from the mean (s.e.m). Experiment represents data from 2 cows from the University of Minnesota. All time points were conducted in triplicate. n.s. is abbreviated for not significant. Gray line separates inoculum from the infection time points.