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Immunostimulation with Vaccines 이승주 UTIs • >70-80% caused by uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) • affect 8 million women annually in the US • high recurrence rate: >25% of all UTIs recur within 6 months • Antibiotics: primary means of prophylaxis – Emergence of increasing numbers of drugresistant bacteria • Alternative prevention strategies – Vaccines Contents 1. Pathophysiology of UTIs 2. Immunology of UTIs 3. Vaccines for UTIs UTI etiology • Uropathogens from intestinal flora sequentially colonize mucosal surfaces of the vagina and urethra prior to establishing an infection on the bladder mucosa Pathogenesis of cystitis COLONIZATION Establishment of bacteria on host cell surfaces Commensal State Opportunists Infection Pathogens (Extreme range of virulence and infectivity) The first step to colonization is adherence to a host cell surface. Adherence Mechanisms • Adherence is required for extracellular colonization as well as internalization of bacteria. • Adhesins - General term for bacterial structures involved in adhesion. – Pili or fimbriae – Gram-negative bacteria – Non-pilus adhesins – Gram-positive and negative bacteria • Bacteria often have a variety of both types of adhesins. Afimbrial adhesin Type I fimbriae Type IV fimbriae (= bundle forming pilus) Curli Fimbriae or Pili • Filamentous organelles expressed on the surface of gram-negative bacteria and mediate attachment to host tissues. • First described by Duguid et al. in 1955 – Duguid JP, Smith IW, Dempster G, Edmunds PN. Non-flagellar filamentous appendages (“fimbriae”) and haemagglutinating activity in Bacterium coli, Journal of Pathol Bacteriol, 70, 335, 1955. • Found on a variety of gramnegative bacteria including saprophytes, commensals and pathogens. P or Pap pili: Uropathogenic strains of E. coli associated with pyelonephritis Genes (11) in pap gene cluster (PapAPapK) Thick, rigid filaments; Rod is composed of several thousand pilin units tightly wound in a right-hand helix to form a hollow cylinder with an outer diameter of ~7 nm and an inner diameter of 1.5 – 3 nm. Flexible, more narrow tip (fibrillum) with adhesin on distal end. ~ 1000-2000 nm long Adhesin binds to Gal(1,4)Gal moieties of glycolipids on uroepithelial cells Type 1 pili – similar to P pili Found in E. coli and most Enterobacteriaceae. Important virulence factor In cystitis-associated E. coli. Genes in Fim gene cluster (FimA-FimH) Fibrillum is shorter and stubbier. FimH also intercalates with rod at buried sites that may Adhesin (FimH) binds to mannose be exposed when breakage oligosacchaarides attached to occurs at these sites. uroplakin on surface of urinary bladder epithelium Adhesins recognize and bind to specific receptors on host cells. This may activate complex signal transduction cascades resulting in: • Activation of innate defenses • Subversion of cellular processes facilitating bacterial invasion • May activate expression of new genes in bacterial cell that are important in pathogenic process • Important UTI vaccine candidate Contents 1. Pathophysiology of UTIs 2. Immunology of UTIs 3. Vaccines for UTIs Mucosal peripheral central NALT BALT *** # GALT *** # RALT *** The secondary lymphoid organs can be subdivided into the Systemic (***) and Mucosal immune systems MALT (Mucosal Associated Lymphoid System) • Differs fundamentally from systemic immune responses in that: – major isotype in mucosal secretions is secretory IgA – most of the antibody-producing cells and effector T occur in the MALT – separate inductive and effector lymphoid sites Mucosal immune response Mucosal Inductive Sites Effector Sites MALT Integrated system Contents 1. Pathophysiology of UTIs 2. Immunology of UTIs 3. Vaccines for UTIs UTI vaccine • efficacy & safety • Ideally, the vaccine will increase patient resistance to the most common uropathogens without causing significant adverse effects. • administered easily • low cost • broad patient acceptance UTI Vaccines currently in development • Urovac® (SolcoBasel, Basel, Switzerland and Protein Express, Cincinnati, OH) • Uro-Vaxom® (OM Pharma, Myerin, Switzerland) • Urvakol (Institute of Microbiology; Olomouc, Czech Republic) • Urostim (Bulbio; National Center for Infectious and Parasitic Diseases, Sofia, Bulgaria) • FimCH (Medimmune, Gaithersburg, MD) Components of vaccine • Intact bacteria (whole cells) or crude lysates – contain a large number of urovirulence factors – potentially afford protection against many different strains of uropathogens – cause unacceptable adverse reactions by bacterial components such as endotoxin • Detoxified bacterial lysates or purified virulence factor – less toxic – decrease ability to protect against a wide range of pathogens Route of administration • Mucosal – Immunogen onto the mucosal surface that may infected or onto a distant mucosal site because of the integrated nature of the mucosal immune system • Parenteral – Induce lower amounts of specific antibody in mucosal secretions Urovac® • Inactivated whole-cell; 10 uropathogens – six E. coli strains – Proteus mirabilis, Proteus morganii, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterococcus faecalis – Final concentration: 1 x 109 bacteria/dose • Intramuscular injection (initially in 1987) • Vaginal suppository; primary + monthly booster (mucosal immunization) J Urol 2007;177:1349-1353 75 paients, Urovac vaginal suppositories, 6 months Percent infection-free Any bacterial strain E. coli •No significant adverse events Uro-Vaxom® • Extract from 18 uropathogenic E. coli strains – Induction of antibody to Proteus, Klebsiella, Enterococcus species • Oral capsule; daily for 3 months + three 10-day boosters (mucosal immunization) European Urology 2005;47:542-548 1 year 9 EU countries 52 centers N=454 12 University hospitals, 50 female patients, 6 months •No significant adverse events Urvakol & Urostim • Urvakol – inactivated, whole E. coli, P. mirabilis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, E. faecalis – Oral tablet; daily for 3 months (mucosal immunization) Bratisl lek Listy 1999;100:246-251 • Urostim – freeze-dried excipient plus lysates of killed E. coli, P. mirabilis, K. pneumoniae, and E. faecalis – Oral tablet; daily for 6 months (mucosal immunization) Adv Exp Med Biol 2000;485:325-329 FimCH • E. coli type 1 fimbrial adhesin (FimH) and its caperone protein (FimC) • Parenteral; intramuscular injection • Animal (Cynomolgus monkey) study J Infect Dis 2000;181:774-778 • Phase 1 trial, 48 adult women – Intramuscular injection at 0, 1, and 4 months – Increases in anti-FimH antibodies in serum, urine, or vaginal secretions Personal communication of Dr. Uehling Summary Mucosal immunogen vaccine •Urovac & Uro-Vaxom Adhesin vaccine •Vaginal or Oral route •FimCH (type 1 fimbriae) PapDG (P pili) •Parenteral route •induce protective antibodies on the mucosal surfaces of the vagina and bladder •interrupt a key initial step of bacterial adhesion to the urogenital mucosa