“…However, due to a rise in antibiotic resistance of NTS (Feasey et al, 2012;Lunguya et al, 2013), the emergence of the highly antibiotic resistant and virulent ST313 strain in sub-Saharan Africa (Kingsley et al, 2009;Okoro et al, 2012), and the increasing severity of NTS-mediated disease in developed countries, a pressing need exists for the development of an effective vaccine to prevent NTS infection. Vaccine strategies for NTS have included: 1) liveattenuation of housekeeping genes or genes that are important for essential biosynthetic processes such as aro (Hormaeche et al, 1990(Hormaeche et al, , 1991, dam (Heithoff et al, 2001), crp/ cdt (Zhang et al, 1997b(Zhang et al, , 1999, relA/ spoT (Na et al, 2006), or guaA/ clpP/ fliD (Tennant et al, 2011); 2) conjugate vaccines consisting of conjugation of the lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-derived serovar-specific O-polysaccharide to protein (Jazani et al, 2005;Simon et al, 2011bSimon et al, , 2013Svenson et al, 1979;Watson et al, 1992); and 3) subunit vaccines utilizing peptides from the type 3 secretion system (T3SS) (Kurtz et al, 2014), fimbriae (Pang et al, 2013), and flagellin (Bobat et al, 2011). Nevertheless, despite years of research no licensed human NTS vaccines currently exist.…”