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Delivery of Epitopes by the Salmonella Type III Secretion System for Vaccine Development Holger Rüssmann, Homayoun Shams, Fernando Poblete, Yixin Fu, Jorge E. Galán, Ruben O. Donis By: Kita Scott and Anna Strongin Question Which Salmonella strain was unable to translocate SptP chimeric proteins into the host cell? Salmonella as an Antigen Delivery System Can be rendered avirulent Expresses foreign proteins from pathogenic organisms Able to invade nonphagocytic cells Uses type III secretion system for protein translocation Delivers antigens that can stimulate both humoral and cellular immune responses Type III Secretion System (TTSS) Encoded in a pathogenicity island at centisome 63 of the Salmonella chromosome Pancetti and Galán, FEMS Micriobiology Letters, 197(2001), 203-208 Type III Secretion System (cont) Type III Secretion System delivers proteins to the host cell cytosol Importance of a type III secretion system Internalized bacteria is confined to a membrane bound compartment within the host cell This prevents protein delivery into host cell cytosol Antigens must be present in the cytosol to elicit a class I immune response Alberts, Molecular Biology of the Cell, 4th edition Some Proteins Secreted by the TTSS SptP – effector protein – GTPase Activating Protein activity at the Nterminus – tyrosine phosphatase activity at the C-terminus SipD – essential for type III translocation but not secretion InvJ – secreted but not translocated – required for needle complex assembly Fusion of TTSS Protein to Class—I restricted Epitopes Chimera created by inserting influenza virus epitope (IVNP366-374) and lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus nucleoprotein (LCMVNP118-126) into SptP In Vitro Epitope Translocation to the Host Cell Chimeric proteins introduced into wildtype as well as sptP-/aroA- and SipDSalmonella mutant strains Cell fractions examined for presence of SptP fusion proteins Results SipD- strain secretes SptP-IVNP366-374 but does not translocate it to the cytosol Wild-type and aroA- sptP- strains deliver SptP-IVNP366-374 to host-cell cytosol Conclusions SipD is necessary for translocation into host-cell by the type III system, but not for secretion SptP can be used to deliver foreign proteins to the host-cell cytoplasm Epitope Delivery to the Class-I Antigen Presenting Pathway Murine RMA thymoma cells infected with different Salmonella strains Epitope delivery measured by quantifying interleukin-2 secretory response of infected cells using ELISA Strains Failing to Present Antigen as Determined by low IL-2 Secretion SipD- mutant strain SptP-IVNP366-374 InvJ-IVNP335-498 Peptide Transporter System (TAP) Transports peptides from cytosol to the ER Aids with loading by class I molecules Janeway, Immunobiology, 5th edition Effect of TAP2-defective Mutants on Antigen Presentation Impaired TAP system prevents class-I molecule loading RMA-S mutants show impaired ability to stimulate T-cell hybridomas Conclusions Antigen presentation depends on the type III system delivering epitopes to the cytosol Foreign peptides must be present in the host cell cytosol for entry to the class I antigen presenting pathway Functional TAP system is essential for antigen presentation once epitope is in the cytosol In Vivo Induction of Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes (CTLs) Mice inoculated with different strains of S. typhimurium Constant number of MHC class I-expressing target cells stimulated by different numbers of splenocytes Level of expression of CTLs determined in terms of % cell lysis Most effective CTL response was to the strain expressing SptP-IVNP366-374 Data Supports In Vitro Results Open squares: SptPIVNP366-374 Open circles: SptPLCMVNP118-126 Closed triangles: InvJIVNP335-498 Closed squares: Vaccinia IVNP Open triangles: Influenza virus strain A/PR/8/34 Vaccine Effectiveness Challenged Inoculated mice were infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) Only mice immunized with the Salmonella strain carrying the SptPLCMVNP118-126 protein exhibited 100% survival Data Supporting Vaccine Effectiveness Open squares: aroA sptP mutant expressing SptP-LCMVNP118-126 Closed squares: aroA mutant expressing SptPIVNP366-374 Closed triangles: sipD mutant expressing SptPLCMVNP118-126 Closed Circles: mock control CTL Levels in Mice Infected with LCMV Open squares: aroA mutant expressing SptP-LCMVNP118-126 Closed Triangles: aroA mutant expressing SptPIVNP366-374 Closed Squares: live LCMV Conclusions Class I-restricted immune response depends on antigen translocation to the host cell cytoplasm Immune response induces antigenspecific CTLs Implications for the Future The availability of the TTSS of Salmonella can aid with further development of effective and efficient polyvalent vaccines Targeting tumor-specific antigens to the host may combat cancers by inducing cancer cell specific CTLs Suggestions Address the difference in CTL induction by the SptP-LCMVNP118-126 expressing strain versus live LCMV and the SptP-IVNP366-374 versus live influenza virus Address the difference in the survivability of mice inoculated with a control and a SipDmutant strain