| Literature DB >> 33324583 |
Marie-Noëlle Mévélec1, Zineb Lakhrif1, Isabelle Dimier-Poisson1.
Abstract
Toxoplasmosis is a parasitic disease affecting human, livestock and cat. Prophylactic strategies would be ideal to prevent infection. In a One Health vaccination approach, the objectives would be the prevention of congenital disease in both women and livestock, prevention/reduction of T. gondii tissue cysts in food-producing animals; and oocyst shedding in cats. Over the last few years, an explosion of strategies for vaccine development, especially due to the development of genetic-engineering technologies has emerged. The field of vaccinology has been exploring safer vaccines by the generation of recombinant immunogenic proteins, naked DNA vaccines, and viral/bacterial recombinants vectors. These strategies based on single- or few antigens, are less efficacious than recombinant live-attenuated, mostly tachyzoite T. gondii vaccine candidates. Reflections on the development of an anti-Toxoplasma vaccine must focus not only on the appropriate route of administration, capable of inducing efficient immune response, but also on the choice of the antigen (s) of interest and the associated delivery systems. To answer these questions, the choice of the animal model is essential. If mice helped in understanding the protection mechanisms, the data obtained cannot be directly transposed to humans, livestock and cats. Moreover, effectiveness vaccines should elicit strong and protective humoral and cellular immune responses at both local and systemic levels against the different stages of the parasite. Finally, challenge protocols should use the oral route, major natural route of infection, either by feeding tissue cysts or oocysts from different T. gondii strains. Effective Toxoplasma vaccines depend on our understanding of the (1) protective host immune response during T. gondii invasion and infection in the different hosts, (2) manipulation and modulation of host immune response to ensure survival of the parasites able to evade and subvert host immunity, (3) molecular mechanisms that define specific stage development. This review presents an overview of the key limitations for the development of an effective vaccine and highlights the contributions made by recent studies on the mechanisms behind stage switching to offer interesting perspectives for vaccine development.Entities:
Keywords: T. gondii; brabyzoite; differentiation; immunity; sporozoite; tachyzoite; vaccine
Year: 2020 PMID: 33324583 PMCID: PMC7724089 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2020.607198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
T. gondii, RH, PRU, ME49 attenuated live vaccines evaluated in mouse model.
| Targeted gene | Immunizationmouse/amount/route | Challenge | Protection Acute2 Chronic3 | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase II (CPSII) | BALB/c, 105, i.p. | RH I, 200 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| C57BL/6, 106, i.p | ME49 II, 100 C, oral | 100% |
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| ME49 II, 10 C, oral | 99-93% | ||||
| MIC1+ MIC3 | Swiss OF1, 20, i.p. | 76K II, 45 C, oral | >96% |
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| MIC2 | BALB/c, 5x104, i.p. | RH I, 150 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| Ribosomal protein (RPS13) | Swiss OF1, 105, i.p. | RH I, 2x103 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| ME49 II, 50 C, i.p. | 94% | ||||
| Ortidine monophosphate decarboxylase (OMPDC) | C57BL/6, 106, i.p. | RH I, 200 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| OMPDC + Uridine phosphorylase (UP) | C57BL/6, 106, i.p. | RH I, 200 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| Apical membrane antigen 1 (AMA1) | BALB/c, 105, i.p. | RH I, 105 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| C57BL/6J, 250, i.p. | RH I, 103 T, i.p. | 100% | |||
| CD-1, 104, i.p. | RH I, 105 T, i.p. | 100% | |||
| BALB/C, 105, i.p. | ME49 II, 103 T, i.p. | 70% | |||
| Phosphatidyl threonine synthase (PTS) | C57BL/6J, 500, i.p. | RH I, 50 T, i.p. | 100% |
| |
| ME49 II, 3 C, i.p. | ND4 | ||||
| GRA17 | Kunming, 5x104, i.p. | PRU II, 20 C, oral | 98% |
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| RH I, 103 T, i.p. | 100% | ||||
| Novel Putative Transporter 1 (NPT1) | Kunming, 106, i.p. | RH I, 103 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| PYS 9, 103 T, i.p. | 100% | ||||
| PRU II, 20 C, oral | 98% | ||||
| GRA17+NTP1 | Kunming, 106, i.p. | RH I, 103 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| PYS 9, 103 T, i.p. | 100% | ||||
| PRU II, 100 C, oral | 100% | ||||
| PRU II, 100 O, oral | 100% | ||||
| Tyrosine kinase–like 1 (TKL1) | Kunming, 106, i.p. | RH I, 103 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| PYS 9, 103 T, i.p. | 100% | ||||
| PRU II, 100 C, oral | 100% | ||||
| PRU II, 100 O, oral | 100% | ||||
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| OMPDC | C57BL/6, 3x106, i.p. | RH I, 103 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| PRU II, 2x107 T, i.p. | 100% | ||||
| Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH1, 2) | BALB/c, 103, i.p | RH I, 100 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| Ca2+-dependent protein Kinase 2 | Kunming, 500, i.p | RH I, 103 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| PYS 9, 103 T, i.p. | 100% | ||||
| PRU II, 20 C, oral | 98% | ||||
| GRA17 | Kunming,, 106, i.p. | RH I, 103 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| PYS 9, 103 T, i.p. | 100% | ||||
| PRU II, 100 C, oral | 100% | ||||
| PRU II, 10 C, oral | 98% | ||||
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| LDH1+ LDH2 | ICR, 104, i.p. | ME49 II, 104 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| VEG III, 104 T, i.p. | 100% | ||||
| C7719 Chinese 1,104 T, i.p. | 100% | ||||
| OMPDC | ICR, 104, i.p | ME49 II, 104 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| Adenylosuccinate lyase (ADSL) | ICR, 100, i.p. | RH I, 500 T, i.p. | 100% |
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| ME49 II, 103 T, i.p. | 100% | ||||
i.p., intraperitoneal route; T, tachyzoite; C, cyst; O, oocyst.
1challenge: T. gondii strain and Type/genotype.
2protection against acute toxoplasmosis: non-vaccinated control groups : 100% mortality, except for Wang L. et al. (2020) where 80% mortality, was recorded following challenge with ME49 tachyzoites.
% survival monitored more than 30 days post-challenge.
3protection against chronic toxoplasmosis : % brain tissue cyst reduction/nonvaccinated control group.
4brain cysts were not detected (ND).
HLA-restricted T. gondii CD8+ T cell epitopes.
| Gene ID1 | Protein2 | Peptide sequences | Immunogenicity3in mice (IFN-γ) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| 227280 | GRA3 (T, B) | GRA3 25–33 (FLVPFVVFL) | + |
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| 275440 | GRA6 (T, B, SZ) | GRA6 24–32 (VVFVVFMGV) | − |
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| 233460 | SAG1/SRS29B (T, SZ) | SAG1289-297 (SPEKHHCTV | ND |
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| 207140 | SAG2X/SRS49B (T) | SAG2X 44–52 (FVIFACNFV) | + |
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| 308020 | SAG3/SRS57 (T, B, SZ) | SAG3 375–383 (FLLGLLVHV) | + |
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| 315320 | SRS52A | SRS52A 12–20 (ITMGSLFFV) | + |
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| 286450 | GRA5 (T, B, SZ) | GRA589-98 (AVVSLLRLLK) | + |
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| 227280 | GRA3 (T, B) | GRA3 27–35 (VPFVVFLVA) | − |
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1TGME49_Gene identifier according to ToxoDB.org. (ME49 type II strain).
2Identity of protein assigned by ToxoDB.org, stage specificity: tachyzoite (T), bradyzoite (B), sporozoite (SZ).
3Splenic T cells were isolated from HLA-A2, A3 or B7 supertype mice after peptide immunization and tested for their ability to generate IFN-γ response to peptide.
ND, not done.
+, IFN-g production; -, no production of IFN-g.
Figure 1Cat, livestock, and human toxoplasmosis vaccine strategies. Toxoplasma infection is acquired by three stage forms: tachyzoite, bradyzoite (cyst), or sporozoite (oocyst). In a one health vaccination strategy, the objectives would be the prevention of congenital disease in both women and livestock, the prevention/reduction of T. gondii tissue cysts in food-producing animals; and oocyst shedding in cats. Live mutated or attenuated T. gondii tachyzoite stage vaccines are mostly used for cat and livestock animals. The development of tachyzoites expressing multiple bradyzoite/sporozoite antigens could therefore improve the immunogenicity of live vaccines, whatever the T. gondii stage. Live vaccines would require passing considerable regulatory hurdles that may impede their use in human. Safer subunit vaccines have been explored by the generation of recombinant immunogenic proteins. The use of T. gondii extract allows vaccination with all the diversity and complexity of T. gondii antigens. Subunit vaccines need delivery systems and adjuvants to improve antigens bioavailability and stimulate protective cellular immune responses to T. gondii. Studies aiming at the identification of CD8+, CD4+, and B cell specific T. gondii epitopes are still needed to rationally design an efficient multi-epitope vaccine engineered to focus both T and B cells responses toward a set of critical epitopes selected from a wide range of antigens in order to diversify the scope of the induced immune responses.