| Literature DB >> 27849050 |
Weiwei Huang1,2,3, Shijie Wang1,2,3, Yufeng Yao1,2,3, Ye Xia1,2,3, Xu Yang1,2,3, Kui Li1,2,3, Pengyan Sun1,2,3, Cunbao Liu1,2,3, Wenjia Sun1,2,3, Hongmei Bai1,2,3, Xiaojie Chu1,2,3, Yang Li1,2,3, Yanbing Ma1,2,3.
Abstract
Outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) have proven to be highly immunogenic and induced an immune response against bacterial infection in human clinics and animal models. We sought to investigate whether engineered OMVs can be a feasible antigen-delivery platform for efficiently inducing specific antibody responses. In this study, Omp22 (an outer membrane protein of A. baumannii) was displayed on E. coli DH5α-derived OMVs (Omp22-OMVs) using recombinant gene technology. The morphological features of Omp22-OMVs were similar to those of wild-type OMVs (wtOMVs). Immunization with Omp22-OMVs induced high titers of Omp22-specific antibodies. In a murine sepsis model, Omp22-OMV immunization significantly protected mice from lethal challenge with a clinically isolated A. baumannii strain, which was evidenced by the increased survival rate of the mice, the reduced bacterial burdens in the lung, spleen, liver, kidney, and blood, and the suppressed serum levels of inflammatory cytokines. In vitro opsonophagocytosis assays showed that antiserum collected from Omp22-OMV-immunized mice had bactericidal activity against clinical isolates, which was partly specific antibody-dependent. These results strongly indicated that engineered OMVs could display a whole heterologous protein (~22 kDa) on the surface and effectively induce specific antibody responses, and thus OMVs have the potential to be a feasible vaccine platform.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27849050 PMCID: PMC5110958 DOI: 10.1038/srep37242
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Genetic engineering of a ClyA-Omp22 fusion protein and nucleotide and amino acid sequences of E. coli DH5α- and W-15-derived ClyA.
(A) Diagram of the recombinant plasmid expressing the fusion protein ClyA-Omp22. (B) Comparison of ClyA nucleotide sequences from the E. coli strains DH5α and W-15. The bracket indicates the location of missing bases in DH5α. (C) Comparison of the amino acid sequences of ClyA between the E. coli strains DH5α and W-15. Gray indicates identical amino acid sequences.
Figure 2Presentation of Omp22 on the E. coli-derived OMVs.
(A) SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting analyses of the expression of the ClyA-Omp22 fusion protein in E. coli DH5α within whole-cell protein samples (left), and SDS-PAGE shows its presence in OMVs (right). Arrows point to the protein bands representing ClyA-Omp22. (B) Immunoblotting analyses of displaying Omp22 on the surface of engineered OMVs using A. baumannii Ab1 OMV (AbOMV) antiserum to provide detection antibodies. AbOMVs, E. coli DH5α wild-type OMVs (wtOMVs), and recombinant Omp22-OMVs were treated with proteinase K (PK). The blots were imaged with the ChemiDoc™ MP imaging system (Bio-Rad). The figure is a representative result from three repeated experiments. Asterisks (*) indicate non-specific cross-reactive protein bands in E. coli wtOMVs. (C) Transmission electron microscope images of wtOMVs (left) and recombinant Omp22-OMVs (right). The bar indicates 500 nm. (D) Size distribution of OMVs according to diameter determined by dynamic light scattering. wtOMVs are in red and Omp22-OMVs are in green. (E) Immune fluorescence/flow cytometry analyses of the location of recombinant Omp22. DH5α cells and OMVs were surface stained with anti-Omp22 antibodies. Alexa Fluor 647-conjugated donkey anti-mouse IgG was used as the fluorescently labeled secondary antibody. (F) Schematic diagram of the construction of recombinant Omp22-OMVs.
Figure 3Induction of A. baumannii Omp22-specific antibodies by immunization with engineered Omp22-OMVs.
(A) Immunization and bacterial infection procedures. The bracket indicates the time point of serum collection. (B) Detection of A. baumannii Omp22-specific antibody titers in the serum using ELISA. n = 5 mice/group. (C) Measurement of A. baumannii OMV-specific antibody titers in the serum using ELISAs. n = 5 mice/group. (D) Immunoblotting analysis. The samples were A. baumannii whole cells (105 CFU or 106 CFU). Different antisera were used to provide the primary antibodies. The blots were imaged with the ChemiDoc™ MP imaging system (Bio-Rad). The asterisk (*) indicates a cross-reactive protein band in A. baumannii Ab1 and E. coli DH5α. (E) The Omp22-specific ratio of IgG1/IgG2a levels was measured using ELISAs. n = 5 mice/group. (F) Measurement of A. baumannii OMV-specific antibody titers in the adsorbed serum using ELISAs. n = 6 mice/group. (G) Immunoblotting analysis. The samples were whole cells (~106 CFU) of A. baumannii or DH5α. Different adsorbed antisera were used to provide the primary antibodies.
Figure 4Immunization with engineered Omp22-OMVs increased the survival rates and reduced the bacterial loads and serum inflammatory cytokine levels.
(A) The survival rates with different doses of Omp22-OMV or wtOMV immunization after A. baumannii Ab1 infection; n = 10 mice/group. (B) Bacterial load in the organs and blood; n = 5 mice/group. (C) Serum cytokine levels in mice; n = 6 mice/group. Serum from mice receiving Alum only was used as a control. (D) The survival rates with passive immunization with Omp22-OMV or wtOMV antisera after A. baumannii Ab1 infection; n = 10 mice/group. (E) The survival rates after administration of adsorbed antisera; n = 10 mice/group.
Figure 5Opsonophagocytosis of clinical A. baumannii isolates mediated by Omp22-OMV antiserum in vitro.
The possible bactericidal mechanism was analyzed using serum dilutions of 1:10 (A) and 1:1000 (B), with endogenous complement proteins inactivated or macrophage RWA264.7 cells removed. The results were expressed as the numbers of colony-forming units per ml of culture supernatant (CFU/ml). Experiments were performed in triplicate.