| Literature DB >> 28479174 |
Jerilyn R Izac1, Lee D Oliver1, Christopher G Earnhart1, Richard T Marconi2.
Abstract
The lipoprotein OspA is produced by the Lyme disease spirochetes primarily in unfed ticks. OspA production is down-regulated by the blood meal and it is not produced in mammals except for possible transient production during late stage infection in patients with Lyme arthritis. Vaccination with OspA elicits antibody (Ab) that can target spirochetes in the tick midgut during feeding and inhibit transmission to mammals. OspA was the primary component of the human LYMErix™ vaccine. LYMErix™ was available from 1998 to 2002 but then pulled from the market due to declining sales as a result of unsubstantiated concerns about vaccination induced adverse events and poor efficacy. It was postulated that a segment of OspA that shares sequence similarity with a region in human LFA-1 and may trigger putative autoimmune events. While evidence supporting such a link has not been demonstrated, most efforts to move forward with OspA as a vaccine component have sought to eliminate this region of concern. Here we identify an OspA linear epitope localized within OspA amino acid residues 221-240 (OspA221-240) that lacks the OspA region suggested to elicit autoimmunity. A peptide consisting of residues 221-240 was immunogenic in mice. Ab raised against OspA221-240 peptide surface labeled B. burgdorferi in IFAs and displayed potent Ab mediated-complement dependent bactericidal activity. BLAST analyses identified several variants of OspA221-240 and a closely related sequence in OspB. It is our hypothesis that integration of the OspA221-240 epitope into a multivalent-OspC based chimeric epitope based vaccine antigen (chimeritope) could result in a subunit vaccine that protects against Lyme disease through synergistic mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: Chimeritope; Ixodes ticks; Lyme disease; Lyme vaccine; OspC; Outer surface protein A; VANGUARDcrLyme
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28479174 PMCID: PMC8203411 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2017.04.079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641
Strain description and summary of bactericidal assays.
| Species and strain description/OspA designation | % Killing with α-OspA221–240 | % Killing with α-OspAfull length | % Killing with α-KLH |
|---|---|---|---|
| 84.9 ± 3.73 | 97.6 ± 0.46 | 0 | |
| 44.3 ± 1.8 | 100 ± 0 | ND | |
| 100 ± 0 | 100 ± 0 | ND | |
| 84.0 ± 1.8 | 98.1 ± 1.7 | ND | |
| 70.0 ± 2.0 | 97.4 ± 2.1 | ND | |
| 70.9 ± 3.9 | 100 ± 0 | ND | |
| 36.8 ± 4.3 | 98.3 ± 0.4 | ND | |
| 27.9 ± 2.2 | 100 ± 0 | ND | |
| 15.3 ± 4.8 | 98.8 ± 1.1 | ND |
ND: not determined.
Oligonucleotide primers.[a]
| Primer designation | Primer sequence (5′–3′) | Region encoded by amplicon[ |
|---|---|---|
| OspA 17 LIC (+) | 17–67 | |
| OspA 67 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 43 LIC (+) | 43–93 | |
| OspA 93 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 68 LIC (+) | 68–118 | |
| OspA 118 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 94 LIC (+) | 94–144 | |
| OspA 144 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 119 LIC (+) | 119–169 | |
| OspA 169 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 145 LIC (+) | 145–194 | |
| OspA 194 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 170 LIC (+) | 170–220 | |
| OspA 220 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 195 LIC (+) | 195–246 | |
| OspA 246 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 221 LIC (+) | 221–273 | |
| OspA 273 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 111 LIC (+) | 111–130 | |
| OspA 130 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 121 LIC (+) | 121–140 | |
| OspA 140 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 131 LIC (+) | 131–150 | |
| OspA 150 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 221 LIC (+) | 221–240 | |
| OspA 240 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 231 LIC (+) | 231–250 | |
| OspA 250 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 241 LIC (+) | 241–260 | |
| OspA 260 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 251 LIC (+) | 251–273 | |
| OspA 273 LIC (−) | ||
| OspA 261 LIC (+) | 261–273 |
Sequences included to allow for ligase independent cloning (LIC) are indicated in bold.
Numbering is based on the B. burgdorferi B31 OspA sequence.
Fig. 3.Demonstration that the OspA221–240 epitope is surface exposed on intact B. burgdorferi B31MI. Actively growing cultures of B. burgdorferi strains were spotted onto slides for IFA analyses as detailed in the text. Panel A, non-permeabilized (air dried) B. burgdorferi B31MI; Panel B, acetone permeabilized B. burgdorferi B31MI; Panel C, acetone permeabilized B. burgdorferi B31 2E6 (ospA gene inactivation mutant). Dark-field (DF) and fluorescent images are provided. The slides were screened with preimmune serum or antiserum as indicated along the top of the figure.
Fig. 4.Ab to the OspA221–240 peptide is bactericidal. The bactericidal activity of α-OspA, α-OspA221–240 and α-KLH antisera against B. burgdorferi B31MI was assessed. Killing was quantified by counting of the number of live (motile and intact membrane) and dead cells (non-motile with membrane disruption) by dark-field microscopy (average of 10 fields of view). The data are expressed as percent killing. The One-Way ANOVA with post-hoc Dunnett’s comparison test was used to assess statistical significance (99.9% CI, p < 0.0001; significant differences in Ab mediated killing relative to that observed with α-OspA221–240 are indicated an asterisk). Abbreviations are as follows: guinea pig serum (GPS), heat inactivated (HI), keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH), and unconjugated (UNC).
Fig. 1.Identification of linear OspA epitopes. A series of OspA subfragments were generated with N-terminal S-tag fusions and purified. The recombinant proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE, transferred to membranes and screened with α-His tag Ab (top panel) or serum harvested from individual mice (M1 through M5) that were infected through needle inoculation with B. burgdorferi B31MI. Detection of Ab binding was performed as detailed in the text. The portion of OspA represented in each fragment is indicated above each lane.
Fig. 2.Analysis of the immunogenicity of KLH-conjugated and unconjugated OspA221–240 peptide. Unconjugated (UNC) and conjugated OspA221–240 peptide (KLH) were used to immunize mice and serum was harvested from each individual animal. The IgG titers elicited by vaccination with KLH-OspA221–240 or UNC-OspA221–240 were determined using full length OspA as the immobilized antigen. OspA screened with α-KLH antiserum served as a negative control (data not shown). Statistical significance was calculated using an unpaired, two-tailed student’s t-test (99.9% CI, p < 0.0001; n.s. indicates that the differences were not statistically significant). All methods were as detailed in the text.
Fig. 5.Alignment of OspA221–240 epitope variants. The B. burgdorferi B31 OspA sequence corresponding to residues 221 through 240 served as the query sequence for a BLAST search. The major variants of the epitope identified through BLAST are presented as a standard amino acid alignment. Note that since species-specific variants were not evident, the OspA221–240 and OspB244–260 variants were assigned letter/number designations (“a” for OspA and “b” for OspB followed by a number; a # 1, a # 2, b # 1, b # 2, etc.). Residues that are identical to the B. burgdorferi B31 OspA221–240 reference sequence are indicated by (.).