A multipathogen DNA vaccine elicits protective immune responses against two class A bioterrorism agents, anthrax and botulism
The potential use of biological agents has become a major public health concern worldwide. According to the CDC classification, Bacillus anthracis and Clostridium botulinum , the bacterial pathogens that cause anthrax and botulism, respectively, are considered to be the most dangerous potential biol...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied microbiology and biotechnology 2022-02, Vol.106 (4), p.1531-1542 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The potential use of biological agents has become a major public health concern worldwide. According to the CDC classification,
Bacillus anthracis
and
Clostridium botulinum
, the bacterial pathogens that cause anthrax and botulism, respectively, are considered to be the most dangerous potential biological agents. Currently, there is no licensed vaccine that is well suited for mass immunization in the event of an anthrax or botulism epidemic. In the present study, we developed a dual-expression system-based multipathogen DNA vaccine that encodes the PA-D4 gene of
B. anthracis
and the HCt gene of
C. botulinum
. When the multipathogen DNA vaccine was administered to mice and guinea pigs, high level antibody responses were elicited against both PA-D4 and HCt. Analysis of the serum IgG subtype implied a combined Th1/Th2 response to both antigens, but one that was Th2 skewed. In addition, immunization with the multipathogen DNA vaccine induced effective neutralizing antibody activity against both PA-D4 and HCt. Finally, the protection efficiency of the multipathogen DNA vaccine was determined by sequential challenge with 10 LD
50
of
B. anthracis
spores and 10 LD
50
of botulinum toxin, or vice versa, and the multipathogen DNA vaccine provided higher than 50% protection against lethal challenge with both high-risk biothreat agents. Our studies suggest the strategy used for this anthrax-botulinum multipathogen DNA vaccine as a prospective approach for developing emergency vaccines that can be immediately distributed on a massive scale in response to a biothreat emergency or infectious disease outbreak.
Key points
•
A novel multipathogen DNA vaccine was constructed against anthrax and botulism.
•
Robust immune responses were induced following vaccination.
•
Suggests a potential vaccine development strategy against biothreat agents.
Graphical abstract |
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ISSN: | 0175-7598 1432-0614 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00253-022-11812-6 |