Affiliation:
1. Laboratory Research Branch, National Hansen's Disease Programs, LSU School of Veterinary Medicine, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA
2. Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, University of California—Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Leprosy remains a major global health problem and typically occurs in regions in which tuberculosis is endemic. Vaccines are needed that protect against both infections and do so better than the suboptimal
Mycobacterium bovis
BCG vaccine. Here, we evaluated rBCG30, a vaccine previously demonstrated to induce protection superior to that of BCG against
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
and
Mycobacterium bovis
challenge in animal models, for efficacy against
Mycobacterium leprae
challenge in a murine model of leprosy. rBCG30 overexpresses the
M. tuberculosis
30-kDa major secretory protein antigen 85B, which is 85% homologous with the
M. leprae
homolog (r30ML). Mice were sham immunized or immunized intradermally with BCG or rBCG30 and challenged 2.5 months later by injection of viable
M. leprae
into each hind footpad. After 7 months, vaccine efficacy was assessed by enumerating the
M. leprae
bacteria per footpad. Both BCG and rBCG30 induced significant protection against
M. leprae
challenge. In the one experiment in which a comparison between BCG and rBCG30 was feasible, rBCG30 induced significantly greater protection than did BCG. Immunization of mice with purified
M. tuberculosis
or
M. leprae
antigen 85B also induced protection against
M. leprae
challenge but less so than BCG or rBCG30. Notably, boosting rBCG30 with
M. tuberculosis
antigen 85B significantly enhanced r30ML-specific immune responses, substantially more so than boosting BCG, and significantly augmented protection against
M. leprae
challenge. Thus, rBCG30, a vaccine that induces improved protection against
M. tuberculosis
, induces cross-protection against
M. leprae
that is comparable or potentially superior to that induced by BCG, and boosting rBCG30 with antigen 85B further enhances immune responses and protective efficacy.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
22 articles.
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