Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas 78229
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The vaccine efficacy of the gene sequence encoding the signal peptide of the antigen known as antigen 2 or proline-rich antigen (Ag2/PRA), an immunodominant antigen present in the cell wall of the fungal pathogen
Coccidioides immitis
, was investigated in a murine model of coccidioidomycosis. Expression plasmids for Ag2/PRA(1-18) DNA (signal sequence), Ag2/PRA(19-194) DNA (lacking the signal sequence), and Ag2/PRA(1-194) DNA (full length) were inserted in the pVR1012 vector, and the constructs were used to vaccinate the highly susceptible BALB/c mouse strain. Immunization with the signal gene sequence significantly reduced the fungal burden in the lungs and spleens of mice 12 days after intraperitoneal challenge with a lethal dose of 2,500
C. immitis
arthroconidia, to a level comparable to the protection induced in mice immunized with the full-length Ag2/PRA(1-194) DNA. The Ag2/PRA(19-194) gene protected mice but to a significantly lower level than the signal sequence or the full-length Ag2 gene. The immunizing capacity of Ag2/PRA(1-18) was not attributable to a nonspecific immunostimulatory effect of DNA, as evidenced by the fact that mice immunized with a frameshift mutation of Ag2/PRA(1-18) were not protected against challenge. Furthermore, a synthetic peptide corresponding to the translated sequence of Ag2/PRA(1-18) DNA protected mice, albeit at a lower level than the Ag2/PRA(1-18) DNA vaccine. The protection induced with the signal gene vaccine correlated with the production of gamma interferon when splenocytes from Ag2/PRA(1-18)-immunized mice were stimulated with recombinant full-length Ag2 and was not associated with the production of anti-
Coccidioides
immunoglobulin G antibody. This is the first study to establish that a signal peptide sequence alone, administered as a gene vaccine or synthetic peptide, can induce protective immunity against a microbial pathogen.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
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