Affiliation:
1. Novartis Vaccines and Diagnotics, Research Center, Siena, Italy
2. Departments of Paediatrics and Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Wright-Fleming Institute, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The NadA adhesin is a major component of 4CMenB, a novel vaccine to prevent meningococcus serogroup B (MenB) infection. Under
in vitro
growth conditions,
nadA
is repressed by the regulator NadR and poorly expressed, resulting in inefficient killing of MenB strains by anti-NadA antibodies. Interestingly, sera from children infected with strains that express low levels of NadA in laboratory growth nevertheless recognize the NadA antigen, suggesting that NadA expression during infection may be different from that observed
in vitro
. In a strain panel covering a range of NadA levels, repression was relieved through deleting
nadR
. All
nadR
knockout strains expressed high levels of NadA and were efficiently killed by sera from subjects immunized with 4CMenB. A selected MenB strain, NGP165, mismatched for other vaccine antigens, is not killed by sera from immunized infants when the strain is grown
in vitro
. However, in an
in vivo
passive protection model, the same sera effectively protected infant rats from bacteremia with NGP165. Furthermore, we identify a novel hydroxyphenylacetic acid (HPA) derivative, reported by others to be produced during inflammation, which induces expression of NadA
in vitro
, leading to efficient antibody-mediated killing. Finally, using bioluminescent reporters,
nadA
expression in the infant rat model was induced
in vivo
at 3 h postinfection. Our results suggest that during infectious disease, NadR repression is alleviated due to niche-specific signals, resulting in high levels of NadA expression from any
nadA
-positive (
nadA
+
) strain and therefore efficient killing by anti-NadA antibodies elicited by the 4CMenB vaccine.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology