| Literature DB >> 31788746 |
Arno Thibau1, Alexander A Dichter1, Diana J Vaca1, Dirk Linke2, Adrian Goldman3,4, Volkhard A J Kempf5.
Abstract
The current problem of increasing antibiotic resistance and the resurgence of numerous infections indicate the need for novel vaccination strategies more than ever. In vaccine development, the search for and the selection of adequate vaccine antigens is the first important step. In recent years, bacterial outer membrane proteins have become of major interest, as they are the main proteins interacting with the extracellular environment. Trimeric autotransporter adhesins (TAAs) are important virulence factors in many Gram-negative bacteria, are localised on the bacterial surface, and mediate the first adherence to host cells in the course of infection. One example is the Neisseria adhesin A (NadA), which is currently used as a subunit in a licensed vaccine against Neisseria meningitidis. Other TAAs that seem promising vaccine candidates are the Acinetobacter trimeric autotransporter (Ata), the Haemophilus influenzae adhesin (Hia), and TAAs of the genus Bartonella. Here, we review the suitability of various TAAs as vaccine candidates.Entities:
Keywords: Immunogenicity; Pathogenicity; Trimeric autotransporter adhesins; Vaccination; Virulence
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31788746 PMCID: PMC7247748 DOI: 10.1007/s00430-019-00649-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Microbiol Immunol ISSN: 0300-8584 Impact factor: 3.402
Fig. 1Timeline of the development of human vaccines showing the scarcity of newly developed bacterial vaccines since 1927. Viral vaccines are shown above, while bacterial vaccines are shown below the timeline. Only the first developed vaccine against each viral or bacterial species is depicted (except for typhoid fever, N. meningitidis spp. and S. pneumoniae because of the different vaccine compositions). Not all invented, produced or updated vaccine formulation are included, only the major developments. Noteworthy is that vaccines against only three bacterial agents (N. meningitidis spp., S. pneumoniae, and H. influenzae) were developed since 1927 (light blue part in timeline) [1, 135, 251–253]
Fig. 2Electron microscopy of B. henselae adhesin A and adherence of B. henselae Marseille to human endothelial cells. a ‘Lollipop-like’ surface structure of the long filamentous BadA with the globular N-terminal head domain (arrow with star), followed by the passenger domain consisting of a neck/stalk domain (black line) and the membrane anchor (not visible) spanning the outer membrane (arrow). bB. henselae Marseille (blue coloured) adhering to the surface of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (red coloured) 30 min upon infection. Scale bare: 7 µm
Immunogenicity of trimeric autotransporter adhesins and their potential as vaccine (sub)units
| Genus | Species | Licensed vaccine available? | TAA | Est. MW (kDa)a | Strain prevalence | UniProt accession no. | Immunogenicity | Protective properties | Considered as vaccine antigen | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | YadA | 47 | High prevalence in both strains with few genomic and phenotypic variants | P31489 | Proven: serum poly- and monoclonal antibodies in rabbit and mice, but no mucosal antibodies in mice | Partly proven in mice | No (not by itself) | [ | ||
| No | ||||||||||
| Yes | NadA | 43 | High prevalence (50–75%) in disease-associated isolates; six NadA variants and 89 distinct | Q8KH85 | Proven: strong antibody response in mice and bactericidal serum and mucosal antibodies in humans | Proven: in an infant rat infection model and in humans | Yes [licensed vaccine containing NadA available (4CMenB)] | [ | ||
| NhhA | 62 | Highly conserved in all meningococcal strains; some isolated MenB strains only (partially) express monomeric NhhA | Q7DDJ2 | Proven: serum antibodies in humans and serum bactericidal antibodies in mice (in conjugation with other antigens) | NA | Yes | [ | |||
Yes: targeting Hib No: NTHi and remaining encapsulated | Hia | 114 | Only present in 25% of NTHi clinical isolates | Q48152 | Proven: opsonophagocytic serum antibodies in guinea pigs and mice | Not proven (but strongly suggested) | Yes (in combination with HMW1, HMW2 and NTHi OMVs) | [ | ||
| Hsf | 243 | Present in all encapsulated serotypes and a subset of NTHi | P71401 | Proven: serum polyclonal antibodies in rabbit | NA | No | [ | |||
| No | DsrA | 30 | High prevalence in both | Q9K2H6 | proven: serum antibodies in swine and in mice | Proven: in swine and mice | Yes | [ | ||
| No | Ata | 250 | High prevalence (78%) in monophyletic | A3M3H0 K7ZP88 | Proven: serum, bactericidal and opsonophagocytic antibodies in mice and rabbit antiserum | Proven: reduction in lung bacterial burdens in mice | Yes | [ | ||
| No | UspA1 | 83,5 | High prevalence of | A0A3Q9GAK7 Q9XD52 | Proven: serum and mucosal antibodies in children and adults; bactericidal antibodies detected in mouse and guinea pig anti-sera | Proven: pulmonary clearance of bacteria in immunised mice | Yes (in the past) | [ | ||
| UspA2 | 59,5 | B5L5X1 Q9XD55 | ||||||||
| No | EibA | 42 | NA | Q9LA60 | NA | NA | No | [ | ||
| EibC | 53 | NA | Q9LA56 | |||||||
| EibD | 54 | NA | Q9MCI8 | |||||||
| EibE | 52 | NA | Q9LA53 | |||||||
| EibF | 49 | NA | Q8VW24 | |||||||
| EibG | 54 | Low prevalence in STEC (15%) | Q0EAF1 | |||||||
| Saa | 56 | High prevalence in specific LEE-negative STEC strainsb | Q93F81 | Proven: polyclonal serum antibodies in mice | NA | Yes (for LEE-negative STEC strains) | [ | |||
| UpaG | 178 | Low prevalence in UPEC (21%), mostly related to | A0A0H2VCA1 | Proven: serum antibodies in mice and rabbit | Proven: in mice after active and passive immunisation targeting ExPEC | Yes | [ | |||
| EhaG | 160 | NA | Q7DJ60 | Proven: serum antibodies in rabbit | No protective properties | No | [ | |||
| Yes | SadA | 147 | High prevalence in | Q8ZL64 | Proven: IgG response in mice | Modest protection in mice | No (not by itself) | [ | ||
| No | BbadA (BrpA) | 130 | NA | A0A3G2T987 A1UT92 | NA | NA | Yes | [ | ||
| BbadB (BrpB) | 132 | A1URN1 | ||||||||
| BbadC (BrpC) | 57 | A1URM8 | ||||||||
| No | BadA | 328 | highly conserved in | Q5MWV9 | Proven: serum antibodies in rabbit and IgG antibodies in patient sera | NA | No | [ | ||
| No | Vomp A | 101 | Heterogeneity in | Q64HS9 | Proven: immunoreactive in human sera infected with | NA | Yes | [ | ||
| Vomp B | 109 | Q64HS8 | ||||||||
| Vomp C | 104 | Q64HS7 | NA | No | ||||||
| Vomp D | 99 | Q64HT0 |
NA not assessed
aMonomeric
bLocus of enterocyte effacement (LEE) pathogenicity island