| Literature DB >> 8156053 |
J D Kuenen1, E E van Dijke, C Hol, H J Bootsma, J Verhoef, H van Dijk.
Abstract
The efficacy, as oral vaccines, of hepta- and mono-valent, Klebsiella-containing bacterial lysates and a number of control preparations was tested in mice. The preparations were administered during two periods of four days each, interrupted by an interval of 3 days. Fourteen days after the first dose, the animals were challenged either intraperitoneally (i.p.; peritonitis/sepsis model) or intranasally (i.n.; pneumonia model). Animals treated with low doses of Klebsiella lysate, in the form of either a 7-valent lysate or a Klebsiella monolysate, showed enhanced survival in both the peritonitis/sepsis and the pneumonia models. Hexa- and tetra-valent preparations without Klebsiella were not protective in the models tested. Furthermore, it was found that the protection is accompanied by priming for Klebsiella-specific IgG responsiveness (probably at the T cell level) and by significant IgA anti-Klebsiella serum antibody levels in about one third of the animals. The oral efficacy of Klebsiella-containing lysates suggests the presence of an adjacent component that directs Klebsiella antigen(s) to follow a selective intestinal pathway which renders them immunogenic. The identity of this component is under investigation.Entities:
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Year: 1994 PMID: 8156053 DOI: 10.1111/j.1574-695X.1994.tb00427.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FEMS Immunol Med Microbiol ISSN: 0928-8244