| Literature DB >> 29376949 |
Abstract
Coccidioidomycosis (Valley Fever) is a disease caused by inhalation of Coccidioides spp. This neglected disease has substantial public health impact despite its geographic restriction to desert areas of the southwestern U.S., Mexico, Central and South America. The incidence of this infection in California and Arizona has been increasing over the past fifteen years. Several large cities are within the endemic region in the U.S. Coccidioidomycosis accounts for 25,000 hospital admissions per year in California. While most cases of coccidioidomycosis resolve spontaneously, up to 40% are severe enough to require anti-fungal treatment, and a significant number disseminate beyond the lungs. Disseminated infection involving the meninges is fatal without appropriate treatment. Infection with Coccidioides spp. is protective against a second infection, so vaccination seems biologically plausible. This review of efforts to develop a vaccine against coccidioidomycosis focuses on vaccine approaches and the difficulties in identifying protein antigen/adjuvant combinations that protect in experimental mouse models. Although the quest for a vaccine is still in the early stage, scientific efforts for vaccine development may pave the way for future success.Entities:
Keywords: Coccidioides immitis; Coccidioides posadasii; T-cell mediated immunity; coccidioidomycosis; fungi; immunology; vaccine
Year: 2016 PMID: 29376949 PMCID: PMC5715932 DOI: 10.3390/jof2040034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Figure 1Geographic distribution and phylogeny of C. immitis and C. posadasii. This figure is adapted from reference [1]. CA refers to California (C. immitis) and non-CA refers to non-California (C. posadasii). The color coding is based on phylogenetic relatedness [1]. The publisher has granted the rights for reproduction of this figure.
Figure 2Coccidioides spp. arthroconidia and spherules. (A) Arthroconidia within hyphae (lacto-phenol cotton blue preparation) (B) Spherule containing endospores in tissue (periodic acid—Schiff stain). The images were obtained from the CDC (http://phil.cdc.gov/phil/details.asp). The images are in the public domain.
Vaccine antigens.
| Antigen | Form | Adjuvant | Activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Live attenuated mutants | N/A a | N/A | Active | [ |
| Formalin-killed spherules | N/A | N/A | Active in mice but not humans | [ |
| Spherule extract | N/A | Various | Active | [ |
| Ag2/PRA | Protein, DNA | Various | Moderately active | [ |
| β-glucanosyltransferase | Protein | CpG-ODN b | Moderately active | [ |
| Calnexin | Protein | Glucan and Adjuplex | Modestly active | [ |
| Aspartyl protease | Protein | CpG-ODN | Moderately active | [ |
| CSA c | Protein | CpG-ODN and MPLA d | Modestly active | [ |
| Ag2/PRA and CSA fusion protein | Protein | CpG-ODN and MPLA | Highly active | [ |
| Phospholipase, α-mannosidase and aspartyl protease | Protein | CpG-ODN | Highly active | [ |
a Not applicable; b cytosine triphosphate deoxynucleotide—guanine triphosphate deoxynucleotide immunostimulatory polymer; c Coccidioides specific antigen; d monophosphoryl lipid A.
Figure 3Flowchart for vaccine development.