f Infection of mammals by the parasitic helminth Schistosoma mansoni induces antibodies to glycan antigens in worms and eggs, but the differential nature of the immune response among infected mammals is poorly understood. To better define these responses, we used a shotgun glycomics approach in which N-glycans from schistosome egg glycoproteins were prepared, derivatized, separated, and used to generate an egg shotgun glycan microarray. This array was interrogated with sera from infected mice, rhesus monkeys, and humans and with glycan-binding proteins and antibodies to gather information about the structures of antigenic glycans, which also were analyzed by mass spectrometry. A major glycan antigen targeted by IgG from different infected species is the FLDNF epitope [Fuc␣3GalNAc4(Fuc␣3)GlcNAc-R], which is also recognized by the IgG monoclonal antibody F2D2. The FLDNF antigen is expressed by all life stages of the parasite in mammalian hosts, and F2D2 can kill schistosomula in vitro in a complement-dependent manner. Different antisera also recognized other glycan determinants, including core -xylose and highly fucosylated glycans. Thus, the natural shotgun glycan microarray of schistosome eggs is useful in identifying antigenic glycans and in developing new anti-glycan reagents that may have diagnostic applications and contribute to developing new vaccines against schistosomiasis. Schistosomiasis is a major health problem in tropical and subtropical areas where it is endemic, with more than 200 million people actively infected and 800 million at risk of contracting the disease (1-3). Current treatment for disease is limited to the drug praziquantel (4), but cases of drug resistance have been reported (5). Decades of research on schistosomiasis vaccines have yielded only two candidates for clinical trials, and no encouraging results have been published yet (6-9). Thus, there is an urgent need to develop more sensitive diagnostic methods and to identify new vaccine candidates.Recent studies have shown that a major part of the host immune response to infection is directed against carbohydrate (glycan) antigens in glycoproteins and glycolipids (10-17). A wide variety of unusual antigenic determinants include glycans containing the LDN, fucosylated LDN sequences (LDNF, LDN-dF, FLDN, and FLDNF), Lewis X (Le x ), poly-Le x , core ␣3 fucose, and core 2 xylose structures (Fig. 1) (11, 14, 17), many of which are expressed by all developmental stages of schistosomes (18). Interestingly, monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) specific to these glycans recognize these antigens on the surface of 3-h-old schistosomula, and some anti-glycan antibodies can mediate killing in vitro in a complement-dependent fashion (18-21). Schistosoma mansoniinfected rhesus monkeys, which are known to self-cure after infection, have IgG to many glycan antigens, including Le x , LDN, LDNF, core fucose, and core xylose determinants, and their sera are effective in complement-mediated cytolysis of cells expressing Le x as well as schistosomulum larvae in ...
The parasitic blood fluke Schistosoma mansoni synthesizes immunogenic glycans containing the human Lewis x antigen (Le(x); Galactose-β1-4(Fucα1-3)N-acetylglucosamine-β-R, also called CD15), but the biological role(s) of this antigen in the parasites and in humans is poorly understood. To develop IgG-based monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) specific for Le(x), we harvested splenocytes from S. mansoni-infected Swiss Webster mice at Week 10 postinfection, when peak IgG responses to glycan antigens occur, and generated a panel of hybridomas secreting anti-glycan IgG that recognize periodate-sensitive epitopes in soluble egg antigens of the parasites, and also recognizes a neoglycoprotein containing a pentasaccharide with the Le(x) sequence. One murine mAb, an IgG3 designated F8A1.1, bound to glycoproteins and glycolipids from schistosome adults and human promyelocytic leukemic HL-60 cells that express Le(x) antigens, as assessed by a wide variety of approaches including immunofluorescence staining, confocal microscopy, flow cytometry and western blotting, as well as overlay assays of glycolipids after thin-layer chromatography. In contrast, F8A1.1 bound weakly to cercariae, 3-h schistosomula and human Jurkat cells. We also directly compared the glycan specificity of F8A1.1 with commercially available anti-CD15 IgG1 (clone W6D3) using a defined glycan microarray. The results demonstrated that F8A1.1 recognized glycans expressing Le(x) epitopes in a terminal nonreducing position, whereas anti-CD15 bound to glycans with multiple repeats of Le(x) epitopes, but not to glycans with a single, terminal Le(x) epitope. Our results show that F8A1.1 recognizes terminal Le(x) epitopes and can be used for identification, immunolocalization, immunoprecipitation and purification of Le(x)-containing glycoconjugates from schistosomes and mammalian cells.
Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC), Campylobacter jejuni (CJ), and Shigella sp. are major causes of bacterial diarrhea worldwide, but there are no licensed vaccines against any of these pathogens. Most current approaches to ETEC vaccines are based on recombinant proteins that are involved in virulence, particularly adhesins. In contrast, approaches to Shigella and CJ vaccines have included conjugate vaccines in which Shigella lipopolysaccharides (LPS) or CJ capsule polysaccharides are chemically conjugated to proteins. We have explored the feasibility of developing a multi-pathogen vaccine by using ETEC proteins as conjugating partners for CJ and Shigella polysaccharides. We synthesized three vaccines in which two CJ polysaccharides were conjugated to two recombinant ETEC adhesins based on CFA/I (CfaEB) and CS6 (CssBA), and LPS from Shigella flexneri was also conjugated to CfaEB. The vaccines were immunogenic in mice as monovalent, bivalent and trivalent formulations. Importantly, functional antibodies capable of inducing hemaglutination inhibition (HAI) of a CFA/I expressing ETEC strain were induced in all vaccines containing CfaEB. These data suggest that conjugate vaccines could be a platform for a multi-pathogen, multi-serotype vaccine against the three major causes of diarrheal disease worldwide.
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