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result(s) for
"Olaniyi, Reuben"
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Enhanced Staphylococcus aureus protection by uncoupling of the α-toxin-ADAM10 interaction during murine neonatal vaccination
by
Cho, Byoung-Kyu
,
Tomaszewski, Kelly L.
,
Wardenburg, Juliane Bubeck
in
13/31
,
631/250/255/1318
,
631/326/41/2533
2024
Staphylococcus aureus
remains a leading global cause of bacterial infection-associated mortality and has eluded prior vaccine development efforts.
S. aureus
α-toxin (Hla) is an essential virulence factor in disease, impairing the T cell response to infection. The anti-Hla antibody response is a correlate of human protective immunity. Here we observe that this response is limited early in human life and design a vaccine strategy to elicit immune protection against Hla in a neonatal mice. By targeted disruption of the interaction of Hla with its receptor ADAM10, we identify a vaccine antigen (Hla
H
35L/
R
66C/
E
70C
, Hla
HRE
) that elicits an ~100-fold increase in the neutralizing anti-Hla response. Immunization with Hla
HRE
enhances the T follicular helper (T
FH
) cell response to
S. aureus
infection, correlating with the magnitude of the neutralizing anti-toxin response and disease protection. Furthermore, maternal Hla
HRE
immunization confers protection to offspring. Together, these findings illuminate a path for
S. aureus
vaccine development at the maternal-infant interface.
Staphylococcus aureus
infection results in robust induction of immunity but the development of efficacious vaccines remains challenging. Here the authors present a vaccine that amplifies T cell immunity early in life by targeting the
S. aureus
α-toxin-ADAM10 interaction in a murine model.
Journal Article
Deciphering the Pathological Role of Staphylococcal α-Toxin and Panton–Valentine Leukocidin Using a Novel Ex Vivo Human Skin Model
2018
alpha-toxin and Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL) have been reported to play critical roles in different animal models of skin infection. These models, however, do not completely recapitulate the human disease due to the host specificity of these toxins as well as the intrinsic anatomical and immunological differences between animals and humans. Human skin explants represent a valid alternative to animal models for studying skin infections. Herein, we developed a human skin explant wound model to study the pathogenic role of alpha-toxin and PVL; inflammatory responses elicited by these toxins; and the neutralizing ability of antibodies to mitigate skin damage. Different concentrations of alpha-toxin and/PVL were applied to superficial wounds on human skin explants. Treatment with alpha-toxin resulted in high tissue toxicity and loss of skin epithelial integrity. PVL induced a milder but significant toxicity with no loss of skin structural integrity. The combination of both toxins resulted in increased tissue toxicity as compared with the individual toxins alone. Treatment of the skin with these toxins also resulted in a decrease of CD45-positive cells in the epidermis. In addition, both toxins induced the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines. Finally, antibodies raised against alpha-toxin were able to mitigate tissue toxicity in a concentration-dependent manner. Results from this study confirm the key role of α-toxin in staphylococcal infection of the human skin and suggest a possible cooperation of the two toxins in tissue pathology.
Journal Article
Staphylococcus aureus toxin suppresses antigen-specific T cell responses
by
Olaniyi, Reuben
,
Wardenburg, Juliane Bubeck
,
Lee, Brandon
in
Adaptive immunity
,
Analysis
,
Antigens
2020
Staphylococcus aureus remains a leading cause of human infection. These infections frequently recur when the skin is a primary site of infection, especially in infants and children. In contrast, invasive staphylococcal disease is less commonly associated with reinfection, suggesting that tissue-specific mechanisms govern the development of immunity. Knowledge of how S. aureus manipulates protective immunity has been hampered by a lack of antigen-specific models to interrogate the T cell response. Using a chicken egg OVA-expressing S. aureus strain to analyze OVA-specific T cell responses, we demonstrated that primary skin infection was associated with impaired development of T cell memory. Conversely, invasive infection induced antigen-specific memory and protected against reinfection. This defect in adaptive immunity following skin infection was associated with a loss of DCs, attributable to S. aureus α-toxin (Hla) expression. Gene- and immunization-based approaches to protect against Hla during skin infection restored the T cell response. Within the human population, exposure to α-toxin through skin infection may modulate the establishment of T cell-mediated immunity, adversely affecting long-term protection. These studies prompt consideration that vaccination targeting S. aureus may be most effective if delivered prior to initial contact with the organism.
Journal Article