Efficacy of EHEC gold nanoparticle vaccines evaluated with the Shiga toxin-producing Citrobacter rodentium mouse model

Sarah Bowser, Angela Melton-Celsa, Itziar Chapartegui-González*, Alfredo G. Torres*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) is a group of pathogenic bacteria responsible for several foodborne-associated outbreaks of human diarrheal disease. Although EHEC is a major cause of morbidity as well as the condition known as hemolytic uremic syndrome, linked to the production of Shiga toxins (Stx), there are no licensed vaccines approved for human use. Fully assessing vaccine efficacy against EHEC infections is challenging because conventional adult mice are inherently resistant to EHEC infection and do not develop hallmark symptoms of the disease. Therefore, in this study, we utilized a strain of the murine pathogen Citrobacter rodentium that has been lysogenized to produce Stx2d, which consistently causes lethal infection and other measurable disease outcomes following oral challenge, to further evaluate the protective efficacy of our previously formulated EHEC gold nanoparticle (AuNP) vaccines. Using this model, along with a non-Stx2d-producing C. rodentium strain, we assessed the protection conferred by AuNPs conjugated to three EHEC antigens: EscC, LomW, and intimin (Eae). We demonstrated that intranasally immunizing mice with AuNP-Eae provides partial protection against mortality caused by Stx2d-producing C. rodentium and that AuNP-EscC and AuNP-Eae moderately reduce intestinal burden of the non-Stx2d-producing C. rodentium strain compared with adjuvant-only-treated mice. Additionally, the AuNP-protein vaccines induced antigen- and pathogen-specific serum IgG and fecal IgA against both EHEC and C. rodentium while in vitro functional assays indicate that the elicited antibodies are bactericidal and prevent adherence of C. rodentium to intestinal epithelial cells. We propose that C. rodentium murine data could translate into correlates of protection.

Original languageEnglish
JournalMicrobiology Spectrum
Volume12
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Citrobacter rodentium
  • EHEC
  • hemolytic uremic syndrome
  • nanovaccines
  • Shiga toxin

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