Layering vaccination with antibiotic therapy results in protection and clearance of Burkholderia pseudomallei in Balb/c mice

Melioidosis is a disease that is difficult to treat due to the causative organism, being inherently antibiotic resistant and it having the ability to invade, survive, and replicate in an intracellular environment. Combination therapy approaches are routinely being evaluated in animal models with the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Infection and immunity 2024-03, Vol.92 (3), p.e0045523-e0045523
Hauptverfasser: Barnes, Kay B, Brett, Paul, Burtnick, Mary, Vente, Andreas, Bentley, Christine, Richards, Mark I, Flick-Smith, Helen C, Burgess, Gary, Thwaite, Joanne E, Laws, Thomas R, Maishman, Thomas C, Nelson, Michelle, Harding, Sarah V
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Melioidosis is a disease that is difficult to treat due to the causative organism, being inherently antibiotic resistant and it having the ability to invade, survive, and replicate in an intracellular environment. Combination therapy approaches are routinely being evaluated in animal models with the aim of improving the level of protection and clearance of colonizing bacteria detected. In this study, a subunit vaccine layered with the antibiotic finafloxacin was evaluated against an inhalational infection with in Balb/c mice. Groups of mice vaccinated, infected, and euthanized at antibiotic initiation had a reduced bacterial load compared to those that had not been immunized. In addition, the subunit vaccine provided a synergistic effect when it was delivered with a CpG ODN and finafloxacin was initiated at 48 h post-challenge. Vaccination was also shown to improve the outcome, in a composite measure of survival and clearance. In summary, layering a subunit vaccine with the antibiotic finafloxacin is a promising therapeutic alternative for use in the treatment of infections.
ISSN:0019-9567
1098-5522
DOI:10.1128/iai.00455-23