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Modulation of mucosal immune responses to pneumococcal protein antigens in human NALT by TLR2 and TLR9 ligands Qibo Zhang1, Linda Bagrade2, Ed Clark1, James Paton4, Desmond Nunez 3, Adam Finn 1,2 Departments of 1Cellular & Molecular Medicine, 2Clinical Science at South Bristol and 3Clinical Science at North Bristol, University of Bristol, 4School of Molecular and Biomedical Science, University of Adelaide, Australia. Background: The ability of TLR ligands to activate immune cells has been regarded as the basis for adjuvant activity. Bacterial lipopeptide (BLP) and CpG-DNA which are known as TLR2 and TLR9 ligands respectively, have been suggested to be candidate mucosal adjuvants. We investigated whether BLP and CpG-DNA enhance mucosal B cell antibody production to pneumococcal protein antigens in adenoids which are part of nasal-associated lymphoid tissue (NALT) in children. Methods: Adenoidal mononuclear cells (MNC) were isolated followed by B and T cell separation using MACS. Memory and naïve T or B cells were separated by either CD45RO+, or CD27+ cell depletion. MNC or combinations of memory T and B Cells or naïve T and B cells were cultured with pneumococcal protein antigens, with BLP or CpG-DNA. Antibody production was measured by immunoassay and cell proliferation was assessed by CFSE assay. Expressions of costimulatory molecules including B7.1/7.2, B7h, and CD28 and inducible costimulatory molecule (ICOS)) were analysed by flow-cytometry. Results: Co-stimulation with BLP or CpG-DNA significantly enhanced the primary IgG and IgM antibody responses to CbpA and PspA (p<0.01). While CpG-DNA also increased memory IgG responses to the antigens, BLP reduced them. BLP also enhanced primary and suppressed memory CD4 T cell proliferation, induced significant upregulation of B7h on macrophage/monocytes and its ligand ICOS on memory CD4 T cells with associated IL10 production. Anti-TLR2 antibody inhibited BLP-induced primary T and B cell responses. AntiTLR2, -B7h and -IL10 antibodies blocked suppression of memory T and B cell responses by BLP. Conclusion: Both BLP and CpG-DNA can enhance primary, but differentially modulate memory-type mucosal CD4 T cell and B cell responses to pneumococcal protein antigens in human NALT. These effects of BLP are probably via TLR2 are modulated by costimulatory molecules. This may have important implications for vaccination strategies against pneumococcus. Persistence of protection with conjugate vaccines Andrew J Pollard. Oxford Vaccine Group, Department of Paediatrics, University of Oxford Polysaccharide-encapsulated organisms, such as Haemophilus influenzae type b, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Neisseria meningitidis, are the leading cause of the serious bacterial diseases of childhood including meningitis and pneumonia and the predominant cause of death among children less than 5 years of age in the world. Vaccines based on the polysaccharide capsule are poorly immunogenic in early childhood, presumably because of immaturity of the splenic marginal zone, and as T independent antigens, do not induce immunological memory at any age and may even interfere with later immune responses. The development and implementation of T dependent protein-polysaccharide conjugate vaccines over the past 2 decades has dramatically reduced the burden of disease and mortality from these organisms wherever they have been used. After immunisation, in addition to direct protection of the immunised, herd immunity is induced further decreasing disease amongst those who remain susceptible including the non- and incompletely immunised. In the United Kingdom, Group C meningococcal (MenC) vaccine was introduced in 1999 with a massive catch up campaign in which all individuals under the age of 19 (later extended to 24) years were immunised with the conjugate. MenC disease fell amongst both the immunised and unimmunised sections of the population from almost 1000 cases in 1999 to only 28 in 2006. Significantly, the antibody produced after infant immunization, even with 3 doses of MenC vaccine does not persist well and the levels will have fallen below the protective threshold in 50% of infants by a year of age and as few as 12% have persistent seroprotection by 4 years of age. Persistence is better later in childhood. Herd immunity hides the rapid waning of vaccine-induced immunity among young children and booster doses of vaccine were implemented in 2006 in the second year of life to sustain protection. We have extrapolated data to provide information on the current seroprotection rates in the UK population . At the end of 2008 the vast majority of children aged 3-14 years are susceptible to group C meningococcal disease, but are presumably protected through herd immunity as disease is currently so rare. However, over the next decade, these children will age to 13-24 years, the cohort with historically high rates of disease and MenC may resurge. Sustained population immunity for MenC might be best achieved over the decades to come by the addition of an adolescent booster of MenC or MenACYW vaccine. Title: Structure and Function of Streptococcus agalactiae Esat-6 A Shukla, N Attwood, R Whitehead, D Biswas, R Shaw, K Lightbody, P Renshaw, M Carr, L Snyder, R May, M Neely, T Lammas, M Pallen, S White, Mark Anthony. Birmingham Women's Hospital & The School of Biosciences, University of Birmingham Aims: To explore the significance of an esat-6 homologue in S. agalactiae (group B streptococcus). Methods: An esat-6 homologue was identified in 7 of 8 S. agalactiae genomes. The gene was mutated, and the virulence of mutants assessed in a zebrafish model, and their survival examined in a human macrophage killing assay. Recombinant S. agalactiae Esat-6 was produced for crystal structure determination. We examined secretion of Esat-6 by Western blot, and fluorophore-tagged rEsat-6 to assess binding to human macrophages. rEsat-6 from M. tuberculosis, S. aureus and S. agalactiae, and synthetic peptides representing their C-termini, were assessed for their ability to inhibit Toll-Like-Receptors in mouse and human macrophages, stimulated with TLR2, 3 and 4 ligands. Results: We solved the crystal structure of Esat-6 from Streptococcus agalactiae (see Fig). S. agalactiae Esat-6 has a helix-turn-helix homodimer configuration and has the capacity to form polymeric fibrillar strands with overlapping C-termini. We show that Esat-6 is secreted by S. agalactiae, that it is critical for virulence, that it binds to macrophages, and impedes TLR2 via its C-terminus. We also show that Staphylococcus aureus Esat-6 impedes TLR2, probably through interaction with different aspects of the extra cellular domain of TLR2. Conclusions: The discovery that S. aureus and S. agalactiae Esat-6 family proteins, each with different C-terminal amino acid compositions, impede TLR2 is unexpected. The structural, virulence and TLR2 findings enhance our understanding of Esat-6-family proteins and of the pathogenesis of S. agalactiae and S. aureus. Interferon- gamma release assays do not identify more children with active TB than TST Beate Kampmann 1,2,4, Elizabeth Whittaker 1, Amanda Williams 5, Sam Walters 3, Andrea Gordon 2, Nuria Martinez-Alier1,3, Bhanu Williams 5, Angela M Crook 6, Anne-Marie Hutton 2, Suzanne T Anderson 1,7 Affiliations: 1 Academic Department of Paediatric Infectious Diseases Imperial College London. 2 Wellcome Centre for Clinical Tropical Medicine, Imperial College London. 3 Imperial College NHS Trust, St. Mary’s Campus, London. 4 Centre for Respiratory Infection, Imperial College London. 5 Department of Paediatrics, Northwest London Hospital Trusts, Northwick Park, London. 6 MRC Clinical Trials Unit, MRC, Euston Road, London. 7 Brighton and Sussex Medical School, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton BN1 9PS, UK Rationale: The diagnosis of tuberculosis remains a challenge in children. Lately, blood based assays that measure the release of interferon-gamma in responses to TB-specific antigens (IGRA) have been developed and were introduced into the NICE guidelines for management of TB in the UK in 2006. Although primarily recommended for screening for latent TB infection (LTBI), many clinicians also wish to employ IGRA as a diagnostic test for active tuberculosis (TB). Data in children being investigated for TB using either IGRA are sparse, and no sideby-side comparison of the commercially available assays and the TST has been published from the UK. Objective: We compared the performance of the two commercially available IGRA and tuberculin skin test (TST) side-by-side in children with active TB and LTBI. Methods: We conducted a prospective study of 209 children investigated for active (n=91) or latent tuberculosis (n=118). We simultaneously used TST, Quantiferon -Gold–in tube (QFG-IT) and T-Spot.TB assays. Results: For culture- confirmed active TB (n=25), the sensitivity of the TST > 15 mm was 83%, compared to 80% for QFG-IT and 58% for T-Spot.TB. IGRA did not perform significantly better than TST, although QFG-IT was significantly better than T-Spot.TB (p=0.012). The agreement between QFG-IT and T-Spot.TB in culture-confirmed TB was poor at 66.7% (κ 0.15). Conclusions: A negative IGRA should not dissuade paediatricians from diagnosing and treating presumed active TB. If used for diagnosis of LTBI, IGRA could significantly reduce the numbers of children receiving chemoprophylaxis with very good concordance between both tests. Funding: Wellcome Trust (BK), European Society for Paediatric Infectious Diseases, PEEL Foundation. Supported by the Biomedial Research Centre (BRC) at Imperial College Effects of prenatal probiotic treatment on infant immune responses and colonisation patterns 1, 2 Robert J Boyle MB ChB, 2Lahtinen S PhD, 1Mah L-J BSc, 1Kivuori S MSc, 1Chen A MD, 2Robins-Browne RM PhD, 1, 2Mimi L-K Tang MBBS PhD 1 Murdoch Children’s Research Institute; 2University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia Aims: Observational studies suggest that microbial exposures may be important in preventing allergic immune responses. Intervention trials have identified perinatal administration of probiotic bacteria such as Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (LGG) as a promising approach for preventing allergic disease. We investigated the mechanisms of action through which LGG may prevent allergic disease. We evaluated the effects of LGG administration to pregnant women on infant immune responses and on infant intestinal microbiota composition. Methods:. In a randomised controlled trial of LGG treatment during pregnancy cord blood mononuclear cells from 73 participants were evaluated for markers of T cell regulation, antigen presenting cell phenotype, cytokine secretion and proliferative response to a range of in vitro stimuli. Proliferative response, markers of T cell regulation and antigen presenting cell phenotype were also assessed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 11 healthy adults before and after LGG treatment. Rectal and vaginal swabs, faeces and breast milk samples from participants or their infants were evaluated for the presence of LGG by culture and strain-specific PCR. Bifidobacterium spp. composition was evaluated in rectal swabs and faeces samples using terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism. Results: In healthy adults LGG treatment was associated with a 30% reduction in T cell proliferation to heat killed LGG (P=0.03). Treatment of pregnant women with LGG was not associated with any change in cord blood mononuclear cell immune responses. Treatment of pregnant women increased LGG detection in maternal rectal swabs taken at birth, but did not influence infant colonisation with LGG during the first 90 days. Prenatal LGG treatment increased B. longum colonisation in infants at 90 days (present in 82% probiotic group, 61% placebo group; P=0.01). In infants whose mothers received prenatal LGG the Bifidobacterium microbiota more closely resembled that of healthy breast-fed infants. Conclusions: Prenatal treatment with the probiotic LGG does not induce immune tolerance or priming by trans-placental signalling to the human foetus. Treatment may however influence the infant intestine by promoting a healthy Bifidobacterium microbiota. STAT3 Activation in Paediatric Solid Tumours Fyeza Hasan 1,a, Sian Gibson 2, Dyanne Rampling 2 Neil Sebire 2, Oliver Campos 2, Tom Jacques 2, Adrienne Flanagan 3 and John Anderson 1. Molecular Haematology and Cancer Biology Unit, UCL Institute of Child Health, London 1, Histopathology Unit, Great Ormond Street Hospital, London 2, Institute of Orthopaedics and Musculoskeletal Science, UCL 3. Funded by Institute of Child Health and Great Ormond Street Hospital Biomedical Research Centre Grant a. Aims: Cancers use many different mechanisms to avoid immune detection. Activating STAT3 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 3) is one such mechanism. There is evidence that STAT3 is phosphorylated and activated in a large number of adult cancers, allowing progression by stimulating growth and also by inhibiting the immune response to cancer. Furthermore, STAT3 activation may limit the effects of immunotherapeutic treatments for cancer. This study investigated whether STAT3 is activated in paediatric solid tumours. Methods: Tissue arrays were produced using archived tumour samples for 9 types of paediatric solid tumour, and immunohistochemistry was performed on these arrays to look for nuclear staining for phosphorylated STAT3. Staining was quantified us ing Image J image analysis software. Consecutive 4mm sections from tissue arrays were also stained for the T-cell, T-regulatory cell and macrophage markers, CD3, FOXP3 and CD68, and correlations made with phosphorylated STAT3 staining patterns. Results: Approximately half of the Wilms’ tumours and Ewing’s sarcomas demonstrated STAT3 activation. A lower proportion of other tumours including medulloblastomas, ependymomas, rhabdoid tumours, neuroblastomas and osteosarcomas were STAT3 activated. Staining for immune cell markers demonstrated that the majority of STAT3 phosphorylated cells were unlikely to be tumour infiltrating T-cells or T-regulatory cells. A number of tumour types demonstrated macrophage infiltration. Conclusions: STAT3 may be an appropriate target in a subset of paediatric cancers. It is possible that STAT3 activation contributes to the immune inhibition seen within the microenvironment of these tumours. This work is part of a Cancer Research UK funded collaboration with the UCL School of Pharmacy to develop small molecule inhibitors of STAT3 and it is hoped that inhibitors developed during this project will be synergistic with immunotherapeutic strategies. A dyad of Lymphoblast Cysteine Proteases Degrades the Key Anti -Leukaemic Drug L-Asparaginase Naina Patel1, Shekhar Krishnan 1, Marc Offman 2, Marcin Krol 2, Catherine Moss 3, Carly Leighton 1, Frederik van Delft 1, Hany Ariffin 4, 1Mark Holland, 1Jizhong Liu, 1Seema Alexander, 1Clare Dempsey, 1Ashish Masurekar, Monica Essink 5, Colin Watts 3, Paul Bates 2, Vaskar Saha 1 1 CRUK Children’s Cancer Group, Paterson Institute for Cancer Research, Manchester, 2 Biomolecular Modelling Laboratory, CRUK London Research Institute, London, 3 Division of Cell Biology and Immunology, School of Life Sciences, Dunde e, 4 Department of Paediatrics, University Malaya, Malaysia, 5 Medac GmbH, Germany L-Asparaginase (Asnase) is a key drug in the therapy of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL). Drug resistance commonly occurs through development of hypersensitivity and formation of neutralising antibodies. We have identified two lysosomal cysteine proteases in B-lineage lymphoblasts, Cathepsin B (CTSB) and Asparaginyl Endopeptidase (AEP) that specifically degrade and inactivate Asnase. Gene expression analysis, verified by protein studies in a selected number, show that all leukaemic cells express CTSB whereas AEP is predominantly expressed in poor risk cytogenetic subtypes of B-lineage ALL. AEP cleavage sites were identified and the known crystallographic structure of Asnase was used to predict the molecular consequences of AEP cleavage. These predictions were subsequently validated using site-directed mutageneses and biochemical analyses. AEP cleaves Asnase sequentially from the N-terminus and inactivates the molecule without disrupting known antigenic epitopes. Modifying the first cleavage site generates an enzymatically active Asnase variant resistant to AEP cleavage - such a compound would have therapeutic potential. We speculate that Asnase degradation is basally mediated by CTSB but is augmented by AEP. Thus screening for AEP prior to treatment may permit further optimisation of therapy with Asnase. Our investigations have identified a hitherto unknown pathway for Asnase degradation and inactivation and suggest a novel mechanism of drug resistance in childhood ALL and a model for the development of a new generation of more effective asparaginases Confocal Endomicroscopy: A New Tool in the in vivo Diagnosis of Coeliac Disease Krishnappa Venkatesh 1, Ashraf Abou-Taleb 1 Marta Cohen 2, Clair Evans 2, Christopher Taylor1, Mike Thomson 1. 1 Centre for Paediatric Gastroenterology, Sheffield Children’s NHS Foundation Trust, Sheffield, United Kingdom. 2 Department of Histopathology, Sheffield Children’s NHS Foundation Trust, Sheffield, United Kingdom Background and aims Confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE) is a recent development which enables surface and subsurface imaging of living cells in vivo at x1000 magnification. The aims of the present study were to define confocal features of coeliac disease and to evaluate the usefulness of the CLE in the diagnosis of coeliac disease in children in comparison to histology. Methods 9 patients (7 female) with a median age 8.1 years (range 2-10.5) and weight of 23 kg (range 10.5 -71) with positive coeliac serology and 10 matched controls underwent oesophago-gastro-duodenoscopy (OGD) using the confocal laser endomicroscope (EC3870CILK; Pentax, Tokyo, Japan). Intravenous sodium fluorescein and topical acriflavine were used as contrast agents. Histology of coeliac disease was graded according to Marsh classification. Confocal features of coeliac disease were defined prior to blinding. These included loss of surface villous architecture, presence of broad villi, infolding of villi, intervillous bridging (“sticky villi”) and decreased goblet cells in Marsh type 3b (partial villous atrophy) and absence of villi, crypt hypertrophy and decreased goblet cells in Marsh type 3c (total villous atrophy). Histologic sections were compared with same site confocal images by 2 experienced paediatric histopathologists and endoscopists, who were blinded to the diagnosis, respectively. Results The median procedure time for OGD was 16.4 minutes (range 8-25). A total of 1273 confocal images from both patients and controls were compared with 44 same site duodenal biopsies. 6 patients with coeliac disease had crypt hypertrophy and total villous atrophy (Marsh type 3c) and 3 had crypt hypertrophy with partial villous atrophy (Marsh type 3b). Sensitivity and specificity for the diagnosis of coeliac disease were 100% and 89% with a kappa coefficient for inter-observer agreement between the paediatric gastroenterologists was 0.758. In addition 74% of the images were considered to be of good quality. Conclusion Confocal endomicroscopy offers the prospect of diagnosis of coeliac disease during ongoing endoscopy. It also enables targeting biopsies to abnormal mucosa and thereby increasing the diagnostic yield especially when villous atrophy is patchy in the duodenum. Fat or glucose? The effect of elective caesarean section on the end product of hepatic glycerol metabolism 7 days post-partum. Matthew J. Hyde 1, Julian L. Griffin 2, Neena Modi 1, Lynne Clarke 3 and Paul R. Kemp 4 1 Neonatal Medicine, Imperial College London, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, 369 Fulham Road, London, SW10 9NH, UK; 2Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Hopkins Building, Tennis Court Road, Cambridge, CB2 1QW, UK; 3School of Agriculture, Policy & Development, University of Reading, RG6 6AR, UK; 4Section of Molecular Medicine, Sir Alexander Fleming Building, Imperial College London, South Kensington, SW7 2AZ, UK. Caesarean section (CS) delivered piglets accumulate less hepatic lipid after 7 days on total parenteral nutrition (TPN), than vaginally delivered (VD) animals (1) . Babies born by elective CS have altered plasma hormone and metabolite profiles compared to VD neonates (2) , including thyroid hormone (3) . Glycerolphosphate dehydrogenase (G3PDH) activity postpartum is stimulated by thyroid hormone secretion (4,5) . We hypothesise that CS neonates fail to stimulate gluconeogenic activity from glycerol, instead diverting glycerol into hepatic lipid storage. Method: Experiments were conducted under Home Office licence with relevant ethical approval. Piglets born by CS (≈3 days preterm) or VD (at term), had bilateral jugular catheters inserted 3 hours postpartum. Piglets (CS n = 5, VD n = 4) received TPN (including Intralipid 20%) for ≈7 days, after which they were killed and tissue sampled. Hepatic lipid was determined gravimetrically. Plasma hormone and metabolite concentrations and liver glycerol were assayed using commercial kits. Liver G3PDH and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) activity were measured by colourimetric assay and hepatic glucose by 1H NMR spectroscopy. Statistical differences were assessed by ANOVA General Linear Model; results are expressed as mean ± SEM. Results: Plasma thyroxine (T 4) and triiodothyronine (T 3 ) concentrations were elevated in VD animals at birth (T 4 : CS, 6.75±0.45; VD 10.09±3.72 nmol∙L -1 , p<0.05. T 3 : CS, 1.43±0.09; VD 3.75±1.78 nmol∙L -1 , p<0.01) but there was no difference in plasma T 3 on day 7 between CS and VD piglets. After 7 days, liver lipid content was higher (p<0.05) in CS vs. VD piglets (CS 7.6±0.8; VD 4.2±0.2 % (w/w)). Conversely, hepatic and plasma glucose were elevated in the VD piglets (Hepatic glucose: CS, 8.44±0.27; VD 16.30±0.20 arbitrary units p<0.05. Plasma glucose: CS, 3.80±0.16; VD 5.13±0.76 mmol∙L -1 p=0.17) suggesting greater gluconeogenesis in VD animals. Hepatic glycerol was reduced (CS 39.8±8.2; VD 14.6±8.4 mg∙g liver -1 : p<0.05) whilst hepatic G3PDH activity increased (CS 12.27±1.77; VD 23.89±5.81 M∙mg protein -1min-1 : p<0.05) in VD vs. CS animals. However, mode of delivery did not alter PEPCK activity (CS 10.57±1.38; VD 11.35±0.70 mU∙mg protein -1 ). These data suggest increased gluconeogenic activity from glycerol, but not from tricarboxylic acid cycle precursors, in VD piglets. Conclusion: In the neonate, VD increases thyroid hormones which are associated with increased glycerolphosphate dehydrogenase activity. This change in enzyme activity diverts glycerol towards gluconeogenesis rather than fatty acid esterification and consequent lipid storage. The absence of these changes in CS neonates may increase susceptibility to abnormal lipid accumulation. The authors wish to thank John Laws, Anne Corson, Kate Perkins and Jennie Litten, for their assistance with animal husbandry. MJH is funded by a BBSRC Studentship. The culture of primary bronchial epithelial cells from cystic fibrosis lungs removed at the time of transplantation - A model to study cystic fibrosis lung disease Brodlie M1,2, McKean MC 2, Perry J3, Nicholson A 3, Johnson GE 1, Pearson JP 4, Fisher A 1, Corris PA 1, Lordan JL 1 and Ward C 1 1 Institute of Cellular Medicine, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE2 4HH Paediatric Respiratory Unit, Newcastle Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE7 7DN 3 Department of Microbiology, Newcastle Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust 4 Institute for Cell and Molecular Biosciences, Newcastle University 2 Aims Mortality and morbidity in cystic fibrosis (CF) are largely due to lung disease. Despite improvements in survival the exact pathogenesis of CF lung disease remains poorly understood. Ultimately, however, it results in progressive bronchiectasis and premature death. Lung transplantation is the only life-sustaining option for end-stage disease. Studies involving animal models and immortalised cell lines have contributed significantly to our current knowledge of CF lung disease. However, there are inherent limitations to both approaches, including poor replication of lung pathology and failure to reflect in vivo findings. The opportunity to work on primary tissue from patients with CF is rare. The aim of this work was to establish an ex vivo culture system for primary bronchial epithelial cells (PBECs) from the lungs of people with CF removed at the time of transplantation. Methods Pieces of segmental bronchus were removed immediately after explantation and treated with patient-specific antimicrobials and mucolytics to achieve disinfection. PBECs were harvested and submerged cultures established before transfer to an air-liquid interface (ALI). Cultures were characterised morphologically and histologically using light and scanning electron microscopy. Mucus production at ALI was assessed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and amylase-periodic acid Schiff staining. Results PBECs have been successfully cultured from 12 of 18 patients attempted. Mucus production and tight junction formation has been demonstrated at ALI. The PBECs remain viable after storage in liquid nitrogen. PBEC cultures failed from 2 patients due to immediate overgrowth with Burkholderia cepacia complex and in 4 patients initially successful cultures overgrew with Pseudomonas aeruginosa once antiimicrobials were withdrawn. Conclusions PBEC culture is possible from lungs removed at the time of transplantation from people with CF. Tailored antimicrobial strategies are practicable and yield a favourable success rate. This technique represents a valuable resource that provides a cellular model to elucidate the pathogenic mechanisms in CF lung disease and to investigate potential therapeutic targets.