Vaccination with Strongyloides ratti heat shock protein 60 increases susceptibility to challenge infection by induction of Th1 response.

  • Nadia Ben Nouir
  • Marie-Luise Eschbach
  • Melanie Piedavent
  • Anke Osterloh
  • Manchang Tanyi Kingsley
  • Klaus Erttmann
  • Norbert Brattig
  • Eva Liebau
  • Bernhard Fleischer
  • Minka Breloer

Abstract

The control of strongyloidiasis affecting approximately 100 million people - caused by the gastrointestinal nematode Strongyloides stercoralis - is still based on anti-helminthic treatment. In the current study we analysed the immune response to Strongyloides ratti heat shock protein 60 (srHSP60) as a possible vaccine candidate in the murine system. We show that srHSP60 is a target of both, humoral and cellular response in S. ratti-infected mice. Strikingly, vaccination with srHSP60 without adjuvant or with CFA induced a S. ratti-specific Th1 response in vivo that did not confer protection but slightly increased larval output during challenge infection. Using in vitro T cell stimulation assays we provide further evidence that srHSP60 skewed activated T cells towards a Th1 response that interfered with efficient clearance of S. ratti infection. Vaccination with alum-precipitated srHSP60, in contrast, overruled the Th1-inducing activity intrinsic to srHSP60, induced a Th2 response, and conferred partial protection against a challenge infection. As srHSP60 is actively secreted by S. ratti during all life stages, our findings strongly suggest that srHSP60 induced polarization towards a Th1 response reflects a mechanism of immune evasion by this pathogenic nematode.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer5
ISSN0264-410X
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2012
pubmed 22172506