1. A live-attenuated chlamydial vaccine protects against trachoma in nonhuman primates
- Author
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Linnell B. Randall, Gail L. Sturdevant, Norma Olivares-Zavaleta, Morgan M. Goheen, Michael J. Parnell, William M. Whitmire, Harlan D. Caldwell, Lacey D. Taylor, Laszlo Kari, Chunxue Lu, Lauren E. Bakios, John H. Carlson, and Guangming Zhong
- Subjects
genetic structures ,Ocular Pathology ,Immunology ,Chlamydia trachomatis ,Disease ,Biology ,Vaccines, Attenuated ,medicine.disease_cause ,Major histocompatibility complex ,Major Histocompatibility Complex ,Immune system ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Trachoma ,Chlamydia ,Brief Definitive Report ,Histocompatibility Antigens Class II ,Tropical disease ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,eye diseases ,Macaca fascicularis ,biology.protein ,sense organs - Abstract
In cynomolgus macaques, ocular infection with a live trachoma strain lacking the conserved 7.5-kb plasmid induced no ocular pathology but facilitated solid or partial protection from subsequent infection with a virulent strain of trachoma., Blinding trachoma is an ancient neglected tropical disease caused by Chlamydia trachomatis for which a vaccine is needed. We describe a live-attenuated vaccine that is safe and efficacious in preventing trachoma in nonhuman primates, a model with excellent predictive value for humans. Cynomolgus macaques infected ocularly with a trachoma strain deficient for the 7.5-kb conserved plasmid presented with short-lived infections that resolved spontaneously without ocular pathology. Multiple infections with the attenuated plasmid-deficient strain produced no inflammatory ocular pathology but induced an anti-chlamydial immune response. Macaques vaccinated with the attenuated strain were either solidly or partially protected after challenge with virulent plasmid-bearing organisms. Partially protected macaques shed markedly less infectious organisms than controls. Immune correlates of protective immunity were not identified, but we did detect a correlation between MHC class II alleles and solid versus partial protection. Epidemiological models of trachoma control indicate that a vaccine with this degree of efficacy would significantly reduce the prevalence of infection and rates of reinfection, known risk factors which drive blinding disease.
- Published
- 2011
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