1. Effect of O Acetylation of Neisseria meningitidis Serogroup A Capsular Polysaccharide on Development of Functional Immune Responses
- Author
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Carl E. Frasch, Freyja Lynn, David S. Berry, Che-Hung Lee, and Margaret C. Bash
- Subjects
Immunology ,Meningococcal Vaccines ,Neisseria meningitidis ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Epitope ,Mice ,Antibody Specificity ,Conjugate vaccine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Bacterial Capsules ,Vaccines, Conjugate ,biology ,Immunogenicity ,Vaccination ,O Antigens ,Acetylation ,biology.organism_classification ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Virology ,Meningococcal Infections ,Infectious Diseases ,Immunization ,Microbial Immunity and Vaccines ,Humoral immunity ,biology.protein ,Female ,Parasitology ,Neisseriaceae ,Antibody - Abstract
The importance of O-acetyl groups to the immunogenicity of Neisseria meningitidis serogroup A polysaccharide (PS) was examined in studies using human sera and mouse immunization. In 17 of 18 postimmunization human sera, inhibition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay indicated that the majority of antibodies binding to serogroup A PS were specific for epitopes involving O-acetyl groups. Studies with mice also showed an essential role for O-acetyl groups, where serum bactericidal titers following immunization with de-O-acetylated (de-O-Ac) conjugate vaccine were at least 32-fold lower than those following immunization with O-Ac PS-conjugate vaccine and 4-fold lower than those following immunization with native capsular PS. Inhibition studies using native and de-O-Ac PS confirmed the specificity of murine antibodies to native PS. The dramatic reduction in immunogenicity associated with removal of O-acetyl groups indicates that O acetylation is essential to the immunogenic epitopes of serogroup A PS. Since levels of bactericidal antibodies are correlated with protection against disease, O-acetyl groups appear to be important in protection.
- Published
- 2002
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