An intranasal stringent response vaccine targeting dendritic cells as a novel adjunctive therapy against tuberculosis
Styliani Karanika, James T. Gordy, Pranita Neupane, Theodoros Karantanos, Jennie Ruelas Castillo, Darla Quijada, Kaitlyn Comstock, Avinaash K. Sandhu, et al. (18 authors)
Frontiers in Immunology · 2022-09
Abstract
Lengthy tuberculosis (TB) treatment is required to overcome the ability of a subpopulation of persistent Mycobacterium tuberculosis ( Mtb ) to remain in a non-replicating, antibiotic-tolerant state characterized by metabolic remodeling, including induction of the Rel Mtb -mediated stringent response. We developed a novel therapeutic DNA vaccine containing a fusion of the rel Mtb gene with the gene encoding the immature dendritic cell-targeting chemokine, MIP-3α/CCL20. To augment mucosal immune responses, intranasal delivery was also evaluated. We found that intramuscular delivery of the MIP-3α / rel Mtb (fusion) vaccine or intranasal delivery of the rel Mtb (non-fusion) vaccine potentiate isoniazid activity more than intramuscular delivery of the DNA vaccine expressing rel Mtb alone in a chronic TB mouse model (absolute reduction of Mtb burden: 0.63 log 10 and 0.5 log 10 colony-forming units, respectively; P=0.0002 and P=0.0052), inducing pronounced Mtb -protective immune signatures. The combined approach involving intranasal delivery of the DNA MIP-3α / rel Mtb fusion vaccine demonstrated the greatest mycobactericidal activity together with isoniazid when compared to each approach alone (absolute reduction of Mtb burden: 1.13 log 10 , when compared to the intramuscular vaccine targeting rel Mtb alone; P<0.0001), as well as robust systemic and local Th1 and Th17 responses. This DNA vaccination strategy may be a promising adjunctive approach combined with standard therapy to shorten curative TB treatment, and also serves as proof of concept for treating other chronic bacterial infections.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- DNA vaccination
- Nasal administration
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis vaccines
- Immune system
- Immunology
- Vaccination
- Tuberculosis
- Chemokine
- Virology
- Immunization