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1.
Tuberculosis (Edinb) ; 104: 46-57, 2017 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28454649

RESUMEN

M.bovis BCG vaccination against tuberculosis (TB) notoriously displays variable protective efficacy in different human populations. In non-human primate studies using rhesus macaques, despite efforts to standardise the model, we have also observed variable efficacy of BCG upon subsequent experimental M. tuberculosis challenge. In the present head-to-head study, we establish that the protective efficacy of standard parenteral BCG immunisation varies among different rhesus cohorts. This provides different dynamic ranges for evaluation of investigational vaccines, opportunities for identifying possible correlates of protective immunity and for determining why parenteral BCG immunisation sometimes fails. We also show that pulmonary mucosal BCG vaccination confers reduced local pathology and improves haematological and immunological parameters post-infection in animals that are not responsive to induction of protection by standard intra-dermal BCG. These results have important implications for pulmonary TB vaccination strategies in the future.


Asunto(s)
Vacuna BCG/administración & dosificación , Inmunogenicidad Vacunal , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/inmunología , Tuberculosis/prevención & control , Vacunación , Administración por Inhalación , Animales , Vacuna BCG/toxicidad , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Femenino , Inmunidad Mucosa , Inyecciones Intradérmicas , Macaca mulatta , Masculino , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/patogenicidad , Mucosa Respiratoria/inmunología , Mucosa Respiratoria/microbiología , Factores de Tiempo , Tuberculosis/inmunología , Tuberculosis/microbiología
2.
Primate Biol ; 4(1): 117-125, 2017.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32110699

RESUMEN

Endometriosis is a poorly understood common debilitating women's reproductive disorder resulting from proliferative and ectopic endometrial tissue associated with variable clinical symptoms including dysmenorrhea (painful menstrual periods), dyspareunia (pain on intercourse), female infertility, and an increased risk of malignant transformation. The rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta) develops a spontaneous endometriosis that is very similar to that seen in women. We hypothesized that specific major histocompatibility complex (MHC) alleles may contribute to the pathogenesis of endometriosis. As part of a collaboration between the Biomedical Primate Research Centre (BPRC) in the Netherlands and the New England Primate Research Center (NEPRC) in the United States, we analyzed DNA sequences of MHC class I (Macaca mulatta, Mamu-A1) and class II (Mamu-DRB) alleles from rhesus macaques with endometriosis and compared the allele frequencies with those of age-matched healthy macaques. We demonstrate that two MHC class I alleles are overrepresented in diseased macaques compared to controls: Mamu-A1*001, 33.3 % in BPRC animals with endometriosis vs. 11.6 % in healthy macaques ( p =  0.007), and Mamu-A1*007, 21.9 % NEPRC rhesus macaques vs. 6.7 %, ( p =  0.003). We provide evidence that select MHC class I alleles are associated with endometriosis in rhesus macaques and suggest that the disease pathogenesis contribution of MHC class I warrants further research.

3.
Infect Immun ; 78(3): 1032-9, 2010 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20048045

RESUMEN

Both Plasmodium and Babesia species are intraerythrocytic protozoans that infect a wide range of hosts, including humans, and they elicit similar inflammatory responses and clinical manifestations that differ markedly in severity. We recently reported that a rhesus macaque that was chronically infected with Babesia microti was able to control infection with Plasmodium cynomolgi (a parasite of macaques with characteristics very similar to those of Plasmodium vivax) better than naïve monkeys. To confirm this and to investigate the underlying immunopathology, six naïve rhesus monkeys were infected with B. microti. After 24 days, four of these monkeys and four naïve rhesus monkeys were challenged with P. cynomolgi blood-stage parasites. B. microti persisted at low levels in all monkeys, and the clinical parameters were comparable to those of noninfected controls. There was a significant decrease in P. cynomolgi parasitemia in animals coinfected with B. microti compared to the parasitemia in animals infected with P. cynomolgi alone. This decrease in P. cynomolgi parasitemia correlated with increases in the levels of proinflammatory monocytes at the time of P. cynomolgi infection and with higher C-reactive protein (CRP) serum levels 1 week after malaria infection. Therefore, we conclude that ongoing infection with B. microti parasites leads to suppression of malaria infection.


Asunto(s)
Babesia microti/patogenicidad , Babesiosis/complicaciones , Babesiosis/patología , Malaria/complicaciones , Malaria/patología , Enfermedades de los Monos/parasitología , Plasmodium cynomolgi/patogenicidad , Animales , Babesiosis/parasitología , Sangre/inmunología , Sangre/parasitología , Análisis Químico de la Sangre , Proteína C-Reactiva/análisis , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Femenino , Humanos , Macaca mulatta , Malaria/parasitología , Monocitos/inmunología , Parasitemia
4.
PLoS One ; 4(4): e5264, 2009.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19367339

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Continuous high global tuberculosis (TB) mortality rates and variable vaccine efficacy of Mycobacterium bovis Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) motivate the search for better vaccine regimes. Relevant models are required to downselect the most promising vaccines entering clinical efficacy testing and to identify correlates of protection. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Here, we evaluated immunogenicity and protection against Mycobacterium tuberculosis in rhesus monkeys with two novel strategies: BCG boosted by modified vaccinia virus Ankara expressing antigen 85A (MVA.85A), and attenuated M. tuberculosis with a disrupted phoP gene (SO2) as a single-dose vaccine. Both strategies were well tolerated, and immunogenic as evidenced by induction of specific IFNgamma responses. Antigen 85A-specific IFNgamma secretion was specifically increased by MVA.85A boosting. Importantly, both MVA.85A and SO2 treatment significantly reduced pathology and chest X-ray scores upon infectious challenge with M. tuberculosis Erdman strain. MVA.85A and SO2 treatment also showed reduced average lung bacterial counts (1.0 and 1.2 log respectively, compared with 0.4 log for BCG) and significant protective effect by reduction in C-reactive protein levels, body weight loss, and decrease of erythrocyte-associated hematologic parameters (MCV, MCH, Hb, Ht) as markers of inflammatory infection, all relative to non-vaccinated controls. Lymphocyte stimulation revealed Ag85A-induced IFNgamma levels post-infection as the strongest immunocorrelate for protection (spearman's rho: -0.60). CONCLUSIONS: Both the BCG/MVA.85A prime-boost regime and the novel live attenuated, phoP deficient TB vaccine candidate SO2 showed significant protective efficacy by various parameters in rhesus macaques. Considering the phylogenetic relationship between macaque and man and the similarity in manifestations of TB disease, these data support further development of these primary and combination TB vaccine candidates.


Asunto(s)
Aciltransferasas/inmunología , Antígenos Bacterianos/inmunología , Vacuna BCG/inmunología , Interferón gamma/metabolismo , Mycobacterium bovis/inmunología , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/inmunología , Vacunas contra la Tuberculosis/inmunología , Tuberculosis/prevención & control , Animales , Proteínas Bacterianas/genética , Biomarcadores/sangre , Recuento de Colonia Microbiana , Inflamación/sangre , Pulmón/diagnóstico por imagen , Pulmón/patología , Linfocitos , Macaca mulatta , Masculino , Radiografía , Resultado del Tratamiento , Tuberculosis/inmunología , Tuberculosis/microbiología , Vacunas Atenuadas/inmunología , Vacunas de ADN/inmunología , Virus Vaccinia/inmunología
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 105(6): 2046-51, 2008 Feb 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18270165

RESUMEN

Each year, approximately five million people die worldwide from putatively vaccine-preventable mucosally transmitted diseases. With respect to mass vaccination campaigns, one strategy to cope with this formidable challenge is aerosol vaccine delivery, which offers potential safety, logistical, and cost-saving advantages over traditional vaccination routes. Additionally, aerosol vaccination may elicit pivotal mucosal immune responses that could contain or eliminate mucosally transmitted pathogens in a preventative or therapeutic vaccine context. In this current preclinical non-human primate investigation, we demonstrate the feasibility of aerosol vaccination with the recombinant poxvirus-based vaccine vectors NYVAC and MVA. Real-time in vivo scintigraphy experiments with radiolabeled, aerosol-administered NYVAC-C (Clade C, HIV-1 vaccine) and MVA-HPV vaccines revealed consistent mucosal delivery to the respiratory tract. Furthermore, aerosol delivery of the vaccines was safe, inducing no vaccine-associated pathology, in particular in the brain and lungs, and was immunogenic. Administration of a DNA-C/NYVAC-C prime/boost regime resulted in both systemic and anal-genital HIV-specific immune responses that were still detectable 5 months after immunization. Thus, aerosol vaccination with NYVAC and MVA vectored vaccines constitutes a tool for large-scale vaccine efforts against mucosally transmitted pathogens.


Asunto(s)
Aerosoles , Vectores Genéticos , Vacunas/administración & dosificación , Animales , Macaca mulatta , Distribución Tisular , Vacunas/efectos adversos , Vacunas/genética , Vacunas/inmunología , Vacunas/farmacocinética
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