TB Research

Novel fusion protein REA induces robust prime protection against tuberculosis in mice

Gurmessa SK, Choi HG, Back YW, Jiang Z, Pham TA, Choi S, Kim HJ

NPJ vaccines · 2025-01

Abstract

While many novel candidates for tuberculosis vaccines are presently undergoing pre-clinical or clinical trials, none of them have been able to eliminate infection entirely. In this study, we engineered a potent chimeric protein vaccine candidate, Rv2299cD2D3-ESAT-6-Ag85B (REA), which induced Th1 and Th17 responses via dendritic cell maturation. REA-activated macrophages operated the killing mechanisms of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB), such as phagosomal maturation and phagolysosome fusion, through the (PI3K)-p38 MAPK-Ca 2+ -NADPH oxidase pathway. Dendritic cells and macrophages activated by REA elicited synergistic anti-mycobacterial responses. Notably, REA-immunized mice suppressed MTB growth to undetectable levels at 16 weeks post-infection, which was supported by gross and pathologic findings and acid-fast staining of the lung tissues, and maintained antigen-specific multifunctional IFN-γ + IL-2 + TNF-α CD4 + T and long-lasting T cells producing cytokines in the tissues. Our findings suggest that REA is an outstanding prime prophylactic vaccine candidate against tuberculosis.