The intranasal route was used to study Candida albicans infections in mice.Mice from two different inbred strains were challenged intranasally with C.albicans and the level of local and systemic colonization was monitored. DBA/2 mice were highly susceptible to challenge and viable C. albicans disseminated from the lungs to deeper tissues, including kidneys, liver and spleen within 48 h. In contrast, in BALB/c mice challenged in the same manner, C. albicans were retained within the lungs and cleared. Local and systemic anti-C. albicans immune responses were investigated. BALB/c mice exhibited higher titres of serum and mucosal anti-C. albicans IgA than DBN2 mice. Splenocytes from BALB/c mice, but not from DBA/2 mice, produced detectable levels of interleukin-4 and -5 following stimulation with C. albicans antigens. Both DBAI2-and BALB/c-derived splenocytes produced interferon-y and interleukin-10 in response to similar stimulation. In conclusion, the intranasal route provided a simple, non-invasive murine model for investigating C. albicans infection through mucosal surfaces.
Work from a number of laboratories including our own has shown that foreign B-epitopes inserted into the c/e1-region of Hepatitis B core antigen (HBcAg) elicit powerful antibody responses when mice are immunised with the recombinant core particles. In the present study, we wished to take advantage of the immunodominance of the c/e1-region to deliver cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) epitopes as a recombinant HBcAg vaccine. Our results indicated that recombinant HBcAg containing CTL epitopes of the E7 protein of human papillomavirus failed to prime E7-directed CTL responses when used to immunise mice for antigen processing through either the endogenous pathway via a Salmonella typhimurium vector, or through the exogenous pathway by parenteral immunisation with recombinant core. Hydropathicity plots predict that the presumed surface location of the hydrophilic c/e1-region within the core particle may alter following insertion of hydrophobic residues constituting the CTL epitopes, thereby compromising their presentation to the afferent immune system. Our data indicate that while the c/e1-region has a powerful adjuvanting effect for inserted B-epitopes, it does not serve this function for inserted CTL epitopes. These findings have generic implications for the development of CTL inducing vaccines using HBcAg as a vaccine vehicle.
The major soluble cuticular glycoprotein of lymphatic filariae, gp29, has been expressed in the Salmonella typhimurium aroA aroD live vaccine strain BRD509. Two distinct constructs were generated: a) pgp29, in which gp29 was expressed directly via the inducible promoter nirB, or b) pTetC-gp29, in which it was expressed as a C-terminal fusion to the non-toxic immunogenic fragment C of tetanus toxin, again under the control of nirB. In both cases, plasmid stability in vivo was demonstrated by recovery of recombinant bacteria from livers and spleens of mice immunized via the intravenous route. Negligible gp29-specific antibodies were detected in animals immunized with bacteria expressing the fragment C fusion protein, but bacteria expressing the non-fused protein resulted in gp29-specific antibody production in a proportion of animals immunized. Notably, a number of BALB/c and B10.D2/n (i.e. mice of the H-2d haplotype) responded, in contrast to previously documented nonresponsiveness during infection, or immunization with parasite extracts. Presentation of gp29 by live attenuated S. typhimurium resulted in a broad spectrum of antigen-specific IgG isotypes.
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