Failure of the Mycobacterium bovis BCG Vaccine: Some Species of Environmental Mycobacteria Block Multiplication of BCG and Induction of Protective Immunity to Tuberculosis

Author:

Brandt Lise1,Feino Cunha Joana2,Weinreich Olsen Anja1,Chilima Ben34,Hirsch Penny4,Appelberg Rui2,Andersen Peter1

Affiliation:

1. Department of TB Immunology, Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark

2. Laboratory of MicrobiologyImmunology of Infection, Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Porto, Portugal

3. Department of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London,

4. Department of Soil Science, Institute of Arable Crops Research-Rothamsted, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom

Abstract

ABSTRACT The efficacy of Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine against pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) varies enormously in different populations. The prevailing hypothesis attributes this variation to interactions between the vaccine and mycobacteria common in the environment, but the precise mechanism has so far not been clarified. Our study demonstrates that prior exposure to live environmental mycobacteria can result in a broad immune response that is recalled rapidly after BCG vaccination and controls the multiplication of the vaccine. In these sensitized mice, BCG elicits only a transient immune response with a low frequency of mycobacterium-specific cells and no protective immunity against TB. In contrast, the efficacy of TB subunit vaccines was unaffected by prior exposure to environmental mycobacteria. Six different isolates from soil and sputum samples from Karonga district in Northern Malawi (a region in which BCG vaccination has no effect against pulmonary TB) were investigated in the mouse model, and two strains of the Mycobacterium avium complex were found to block BCG activity completely.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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