Australian Aboriginal Otitis-Prone Children Produce High-Quality Serum IgG to Putative Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae Vaccine Antigens at Lower Titres Compared to Non-Aboriginal Children

Nontypeable (NTHi) is the most common bacterial otopathogen associated with otitis media (OM). NTHi persists in biofilms within the middle ears of children with chronic and recurrent OM. Australian Aboriginal children suffer exceptionally high rates of chronic and recurrent OM compared to non-Aborig...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology 2022-04, Vol.12, p.767083-767083
Hauptverfasser: Clark, Sharon L, Seppanen, Elke J, Kirkham, Lea-Ann S, Novotny, Laura A, Bakaletz, Lauren O, Cripps, Allan W, Corscadden, Karli, Coates, Harvey, Vijayasekaran, Shyan, Richmond, Peter C, Thornton, Ruth B
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Nontypeable (NTHi) is the most common bacterial otopathogen associated with otitis media (OM). NTHi persists in biofilms within the middle ears of children with chronic and recurrent OM. Australian Aboriginal children suffer exceptionally high rates of chronic and recurrent OM compared to non-Aboriginal children. NTHi protein vaccines comprised of antigens associated with both adhesion and persistence in a biofilm are under development and could be beneficial for children with chronic and recurrent OM. Understanding the ontogeny of natural antibody development to these antigens provides insight into the value of vaccinating with particular antigens. An in-house multiplex fluorescent bead immunoassay was used to measure serum IgG titres and avidity for three putative vaccine antigens: recombinant soluble PilA (rsPilA), ChimV4, and outer membrane protein 26 (OMP26) in sera from Australian Aboriginal otitis-prone children (n=77), non-Aboriginal otitis-prone children (n=70) and non-otitis-prone children (n=36). Serum IgG titres were adjusted for age, and geometric mean concentrations (GMCs) were compared between groups using a univariate analysis model. Antibody avidity was calculated as a relative avidity index and compared between groups using ANOVA. Australian Aboriginal otitis-prone children had lower serum IgG titres to rsPilA and ChimV4 than non-Aboriginal otitis-prone children (p
ISSN:2235-2988
2235-2988
DOI:10.3389/fcimb.2022.767083