| Literature DB >> 31266253 |
Armira Azuar1, Wanli Jin1, Saori Mukaida1, Waleed M Hussein1,2, Istvan Toth1,3,4, Mariusz Skwarczynski5.
Abstract
Group A Streptococcus (GAS) infection can cause a variety of diseases in humans, ranging from common sore throats and skin infections, to more invasive diseases and life-threatening post-infectious diseases, such as rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease. Although research has been ongoing since 1923, vaccines against GAS are still not available to the public. Traditional approaches taken to develop vaccines for GAS failed due to poor efficacy and safety. Fortunately, headway has been made and modern subunit vaccines that administer minimal bacterial components provide an opportunity to finally overcome previous hurdles in GAS vaccine development. This review details the major antigens and strategies used for GAS vaccine development. The combination of antigen selection, peptide epitope modification and delivery systems have resulted in the discovery of promising peptide vaccines against GAS; these are currently in preclinical and clinical studies.Entities:
Keywords: Group A Streptococcus antigens; M protein; adjuvant; delivery system; peptide-based subunit vaccine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31266253 PMCID: PMC6789462 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines7030058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Clinical manifestations of Group A Streptococcus infection [1,2,3,9,10,11].
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| Pharyngitis | Benign local throat infection. Common manifestation of GAS infection. Arises from complex host-pathogen interaction. | Sore throat, high fever, cervical lymphadenopathy, tonsil exudates, raised peripheral white cell count. |
| Tonsillitis | Benign local tonsil infection. | White/yellow spots on tonsils, sore throat, swollen jaw lymph glands, fever, bad breath. |
| Impetigo/Pyoderma | Benign local skin infection. Common in childhood. Arises from complex host-pathogen interaction. | Superficial, non-follicular, crusted lesion on the face and other exposed body parts. |
| Scarlet fever | Disease that can follow an episode of GAS-mediated pharyngitis. Commonly occurs in children. | Diffuse blanching rash on chest to abdomen, sandpaper-like texture to the skin. |
| Otitis media | Infection in the middle ear. | Otalgia, otorrhea, headache, fever, appetite loss, vomiting, diarrhoea, hearing loss, tinnitus, vertigo. |
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| Cellulitis | Painful skin infection on deeper subcutaneous tissue. Frequent manifestation of invasive GAS. Incidence increases with age. | Fever, systemic toxicity, inflammation of the skin. |
| Pneumonia | Infection of the lung. | Difficulty in breathing, fever, appetite loss, abdominal pain, headache, chest pain, cough, cyanosis. |
| Necrotising fasciitis (flesh eating bacteria) | Rapidly progressing skin infection that causes a destruction of subcutaneous fat, tissue and muscle. | Fever, spared overlying skin, severe pain, violaceous, bullae and slough skin, shock, multi-organ failure. |
| Streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (STSS) | Associated with GAS necrotising fasciitis. | High fever, hypotension, rash, coagulopathy, respiratory distress syndrome, renal failure, hepatic impairment, multi-organ failure. |
| Erysipelas | Painful skin infection. Frequent manifestation of invasive GAS. Incidence increases with age. | Fever, systemic toxicity, clear demarcated red inflammation, formation of superficial bullae. |
| Meningitis | Inflammation of the meninges. GAS is an uncommon cause of meningitis. | Fever, headache, stiff/sore neck, vomiting, appetite loss, tiredness, drowsiness, irritability. |
| Bacteraemia/septicaemia | Blood poisoning due to the presence of bacteria/toxin in the blood. | Sudden high fever with chills, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, confusion, anxiety, tachycardia. |
| Lymphangitis | Infection of draining lymphatic tracts. | Tender linear streak extending from the site of infection. |
| Septic arthritis | Painful infection of the joint following episode of GAS-mediated pharyngitis. | Fever, enlarged joints. |
| Puerperal sepsis | Infection resulting from the birthing process. Frequent cause of death in the pre-antibiotic era. | Postpartum endometritis, peritonitis, septic, thrombophlebitis/bacteraemia without focus, fever for 24 h or recurring after childbirth/abortion. |
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| Rheumatic fever (RF) | Inflammatory disease caused by cross-reactive antibodies induced after GAS infection. | The combination of fever, polyarthritis/arthralgia, carditis, erythema marginatum, chorea, subcutaneous nodules, and mitral/aortic valve damage. Can turn into RHD. |
| Rheumatic heart disease (RHD) | Inflammation caused by cross-reactive antibodies induced after GAS infection leading to permanent damage to heart tissue and valves. | Tissue inflammation that results in carditis, valvulitis, arthritis, chorea, erythema marginatum and/or subcutaneous nodules. |
| Post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis (PSGN) | Inflammation of the glomeruli in the kidney caused by a build-up of immune complexes induced by GAS infection. Follows an episode of GAS-mediated pharyngitis/pyoderma. | Rapid onset of gross/microscopic haematuria oedema, hypertension, and encephalopathy. |
| Post-streptococcal reactive arthritis | Syndrome of polyarthritis that differs from acute RF/carditis. | Range of smaller joints unreactive to anti-inflammatory treatment. |
| Paediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with GAS infection (PANDAS) | Cross-reactive antibodies induced after GAS infection that interferes with basal ganglia function causing symptoms of exacerbation in children. The existence of this disease is controversial. | Children with tie/obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) worsened/developed after GAS infection. |
Figure 1Schematic representation of M protein. All M proteins are similarly organised; they include a hypervariable N-terminus, variable central region, and highly conserved C and D repeats, though M protein varies in length depending on the pattern type [51]. M proteins may have a long A-C pattern (e.g., M6), intermediate D pattern (e.g., M53) or short E pattern (e.g., M4), with an average residue of 444, 355 and 316, respectively. The N-terminus non-helical region of M protein contains a negatively charged amino acid sequence (variable in length) adjoining the A-repeat region [11]. This region enables antibody recognition and electrostatic repulsion with phagocytes. A- and B-repeat regions have different sizes and numbers of repeat sequences between different M proteins [10,31,51]. On the other hand, the C-repeat region has a different number of repeat sequences, but with similar sequence identity. This conservation in sequence increases with the D-repeat region. These four regions form a helical central rod for M protein. The non-repeating block containing an excess of proline and glycine amino acids adjacent to the D-repeat region enables the M protein to traverse the cell wall. Whereas, 20 hydrophobic and six charged amino acids at the end of the C-terminus help the protein to extend along and anchor to the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane [61]. This cell-associated region is shorter in the E pattern of M protein compared to the other types, with 29 residues instead of 48 [51].
Multivalent vaccines derived from the N-terminus of GAS M proteins in advanced preclinical and clinical trials.
| Name | Stage of Development | Comments | Ref. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preclinical | Phase 1 | Phase 2 | |||
| 6-valent vaccine | 9 white rabbits IM injection | 28 healthy adults | NI | Tolerable. | [ |
| 26-valent vaccine | 3 white rabbits IM injection | 30 healthy adults IM injection | 90 healthy adults IM injection | No evidence of RF or human tissue cross-reactivity. | [ |
| 30-valent vaccine | 12 white rabbits IM injection | NI | NI | Highly immunogenic. | [ |
| 5-valent E4 vaccine | 3 white rabbits IM injection | NI | NI | Highly immunogenic. | [ |
NI: No further information is available; IM: intramuscular.
Figure 2Schematic representation of lipopeptide-based vaccines bearing (a) Pam3Cys and Pam2Cys, (b) a lipid core peptide (LCP) system, (c) a multiple antigen peptide (MAP) system, and (d) lipoamino acids LAAs.