| Literature DB >> 32722452 |
Leandro B R Da Silva1,2, Carlos P Taborda1,3, Joshua D Nosanchuk2.
Abstract
Vaccination is one of the greatest public health achievements in the past century, protecting and improving the quality of life of the population worldwide. However, a safe and effective vaccine for therapeutic or prophylactic treatment of fungal infections is not yet available. The lack of a vaccine for fungi is a problem of increasing importance as the incidence of diverse species, including Paracoccidioides, Aspergillus, Candida, Sporothrix, and Coccidioides, has increased in recent decades and new drug-resistant pathogenic fungi are emerging. In fact, our antifungal armamentarium too frequently fails to effectively control or cure mycoses, leading to high rates of mortality and morbidity. With this in mind, many groups are working towards identifying effective and safe vaccines for fungal pathogens, with a particular focus of generating vaccines that will work in individuals with compromised immunity who bear the major burden of infections from these microbes. In this review, we detail advances in the development of vaccines for pathogenic fungi, and highlight new methodologies using immunoproteomic techniques and bioinformatic tools that have led to new vaccine formulations, like peptide-based vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: aspergillus; candida; coccidioides; dendritic cells; fungal; paracoccidioides; peptides; sporothrix; vaccine
Year: 2020 PMID: 32722452 PMCID: PMC7558412 DOI: 10.3390/jof6030119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
New vaccine proposals.
| Fungi (Reference) | Vaccine (Peptide/Protein/Chimeric) | Immune Response | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peptide vaccine (P10) | CD4+ Th1 cell | Protection against i.t challenge, reduction of fungal burden both in immunosuppressed and immunocompetent mice, and efficacy of DNA vaccine; all tests were performed in animal models | |
| Prediction of sequence of epitopes from extracellular antigens | Potential to stimulate the immune response mediated by B cells and antibodies. | N.A. | |
| Peptides from the protein Asp f1 | Th1 cell | Peptides from Asp f1 stimulate production of Th1 cytokines. | |
| Fab and Met6 Peptides | Antibody | Mice immunized with either the Fba or Met6 peptide-DC vaccine had improved survival and reductions in fungal burdens in an immunosuppressed mouse model of disseminated candidiasis. | |
| 14-mer Fab peptide conjugated each mimotopes from Met6 (PS2, PS31, PS28, PS55 and PS76) and | Specific antibody response | The peptides mimotopes induced a specific antibody response, and immunization with three of the peptide conjugate vaccines protected against disseminated candidiasis. | |
| 18 peptides used to construct a multivalent recombinant protein | N.A. | N.A./requires specific HLA haplotypes to bind these particular peptide epitopes | |
| Recombinant protein (NDV-3 and NDV-3A) | B and T cells | Tested in Phase 1b/2a; one intramuscular dose was safe and NDV-3A was immunogenic and reduced frequency of recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (RVVC) | |
| Recombinant protein (NDV-3 and NDV-3A | Antibodies and CD4+ Th1 Cell | Vaccinated mice were protected against lethal | |
| Peptides (ZR1, ZR3, ZR3, ZR4, ZR5, ZR6, ZR7, ZR8) | CD4+ T cell | ZR3, ZR4 and ZR8 promoted cell proliferation in vitro. ZR8 induced IFN-γ, IL-17A and IL-1β, and showed protection against | |
| Phage displaying of the peptide KR | Th1 and Th17 cell and humoral immune response | Immunization with recombinant phage increased the survival rate of | |
| Peptides from the protein Pep1 | - | Induced IFN-γ production when exposed to lymphocytes. | |
| Peptides from the proteins Amn1 and Plb | - | Induced IFN-γ production by T-cells | |
| recombinant T cell epitope-based vaccine (rEBV) | Th1, Th2, and Th17 cells | Mice immunized with rEBV had increased IFN-γ and IL-17 production, and they had significant reductions in fungal burden and prolongation of survival compared to nonvaccinated mice. | |
| Recombinant chimeric polypeptide vaccine (rCpa1) | Th1 and Th17 cell | rCap1 vaccination generated high levels of IL-17 in T-cell recall assays, earlier lung infiltration by activated Th1 and Th17, and increased the survival rates. | |
| Ag2/PRA-cDNA transfected DC | T cell | Vaccinated mice had lower fungal burdens and increased amounts of IFN-γ | |
| Ag2/PRA primary DC | T cell and IgG isotypes | Vaccinated mice did not show any illness or detectable injury and the immunization effectively induced IFN, IL-4 and IL-17 production | |
| Pan fungal [ | Calnexin peptide | CD4+ Th1 and Th17 cells | rCalnexin formulated in GP reduced lung and spleen CFU in mice infected with |
| Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy [ | D-CAR T-cells | - | D-CAR+ T-cells controlled the |
LPS, Lipopolysaccharide; CFU, colony form unit; i.v, intravenous; rEBV, bacterium-expressed recombinant epitope-based vaccine; rCpa1, recombinant chimeric polypeptide vaccine; DC, dendritic cell; RVVC, recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis; VVC, vulvovaginal candidiasis; GPs, yeast cell wall-derived glucan particles; N.A., not analyzed.