Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 9 de 9
Filter
1.
BMC Infect Dis ; 20(1): 444, 2020 Jun 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32576149

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The syphilis epidemic continues to cause substantial morbidity and mortality worldwide, particularly in low- and middle-income countries, despite several recent disease control initiatives. Though our understanding of the pathogenesis of this disease and the biology of the syphilis agent, Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum has improved over the last two decades, further research is necessary to improve clinical diagnosis and disease management protocols. Additionally, such research efforts could contribute to the identification of possible targets for the development of an effective vaccine to stem syphilis spread. METHODS: This study will recruit two cohorts of participants with active syphilis infection, one with de novo infection, one with repeat infection. Whole blood specimens will be collected from each study participant at baseline, 4, 12, 24, 36, and 48 weeks, to track specific markers of their immunological response, as well as to compare humoral reactivity to Treponema pallidum antigens between the two groups. Additionally, we will use serum specimens to look for unique cytokine patterns in participants with early syphilis. Oral and blood samples, as well as samples from any syphilitic lesions present, will also be collected to sequence any Treponema pallidum DNA found. DISCUSSION: By furthering our understanding of syphilis pathogenesis and human host immune response to Treponema pallidum, we will provide important data that will help in development of new point-of-care tests that could better identify active infection, leading to improved syphilis diagnosis and management. Findings could also contribute to vaccine development efforts.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Vaccines/therapeutic use , Syphilis/epidemiology , Syphilis/prevention & control , Treponema pallidum/immunology , Vaccination , Antigens, Bacterial/immunology , Base Sequence , Cohort Studies , Cytokines/analysis , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Molecular Typing , Peru/epidemiology , Syphilis/blood , Syphilis/immunology , Treponema pallidum/genetics
2.
Infect Immun ; 87(8)2019 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31182617

ABSTRACT

In silico analyses of Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum genomes and predicted proteomes to search for homologs of known bacterial outer membrane proteins (OMPs) led to the identification of tp0126 as a gene encoding a putative member of the OmpW family of porins/virulence factors. Our previous investigations on the role of Tp0126 in T. pallidum biology and syphilis pathogenesis showed that Tp0126 is fully conserved among T. pallidum strains and that transcription of tp0126 is driven by σ70 These initial results pointed to a housekeeping function for this protein. We also demonstrated that a guanosine homopolymer of various lengths located between the -10 and -35 consensus sequences in the tp0126 promoter modulates transcription consistently with phase variation, a mechanism that we also previously described for other T. pallidum genes encoding putative OMPs/virulence factors and that is often employed as a strategy for immune evasion. Circular dichroism spectra of recombinant Tp0126 also supported its structural homology with OmpW. Here we further investigated the humoral and cellular responses to Tp0126 during experimental and natural syphilis and the ability of Tp0126 to confer protection against syphilis in immunized rabbits. B-cell epitope mapping showed that compared to sera from experimentally infected animals, immunizations enhanced humoral immunity to sequences located in the putative Tp0126 surface-exposed loops, while phagocytosis assays showed that postimmunization sera opsonized T. pallidum Despite such promising results, no significant protection was seen following infectious challenge in immunized animals versus controls. Functional redundancy and phase variation might explain the lack of effectiveness of this vaccine candidate and/or design.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins/immunology , Bacterial Vaccines/immunology , Treponema pallidum/immunology , Animals , Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins/genetics , Disease Models, Animal , Immunization , Male , Phagocytosis , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Rabbits , Syphilis/prevention & control
3.
Microbiol Spectr ; 12(1): e0346623, 2024 Jan 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38095465

ABSTRACT

IMPORTANCE: This manuscript explores the host humoral response to selected antigens of the syphilis agent during infection to evaluate their potential use as diagnostic tests and markers for treatment.


Subject(s)
Syphilis , Humans , Syphilis/diagnosis , Syphilis/drug therapy , Treponema pallidum , Antigens, Bacterial , Biomarkers , Antibodies, Bacterial
4.
EBioMedicine ; 65: 103281, 2021 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33721817

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Penicillin G, the current standard treatment for syphilis, has important drawbacks, but virtually no preclinical or clinical studies have been performed to identify viable alternatives. We tested, both in vitro and in vivo, three marketed antibiotics with adequate pharmacological properties to treat syphilis. METHODS: We used an in vitro culturing system of T. pallidum to perform drug susceptibility testing and applied quantitative PCR targeting the tp0574 gene to measure bacterial growth. To confirm in vivo efficacy, fifteen rabbits were infected intradermally with T. pallidum at eight sites each and randomly allocated to an experimental treatment (linezolid, moxifloxacin, clofazimine) or a control arm (benzathine penicillin G [BPG], untreated). The primary outcome was treatment efficacy defined as the time to lesion healing measured from the date of treatment start. Secondary outcomes were absence of treponemes or treponemal mRNA in injection sites, absence of seroconversion, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) abnormalities and negative rabbit infectivity tests (RIT). FINDINGS: Linezolid showed in vitro bactericidal activity at concentrations of 0.5 µg/mL or higher. When administered orally to experimentally infected rabbits, it induced healing of early lesions at a time similar to BPG (hazard ratio 3.84; 95% CI 2.05-7.17; p < 0.0001 compared to untreated controls). In linezolid-treated animals, dark-field microscopy and qPCR assessment showed no presence of treponemes after day 3 post-treatment start, serologic test did not convert to positive, CSF had no abnormalities, and RIT was negative. Moxifloxacin and clofazimine failed to inhibit bacterial growth in vitro and could not cure the infection in the rabbit model. INTERPRETATION: Linezolid, a low-cost oxazolidinone, has in vitro and in vivo activity against T. pallidum, with efficacy similar to BPG in treating treponemal lesions in the animal model. Our findings warrant further research to assess the efficacy of linezolid as an alternative to penicillin G to treat syphilis in human clinical trials. FUNDING: European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (Grant agreement No. 850450).


Subject(s)
Linezolid/pharmacology , Treponema pallidum/drug effects , Animals , Area Under Curve , Clofazimine/pharmacology , Clofazimine/therapeutic use , Disease Models, Animal , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical , Linezolid/therapeutic use , Male , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Moxifloxacin/pharmacology , Moxifloxacin/therapeutic use , Penicillin G Benzathine/pharmacology , Penicillin G Benzathine/therapeutic use , ROC Curve , Rabbits , Syphilis/drug therapy , Syphilis/pathology
5.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis ; 15(1): e0008812, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33497377

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: An effective syphilis vaccine should elicit antibodies to Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum (T. p. pallidum) surface antigens to induce pathogen clearance through opsonophagocytosis. Although the combination of bioinformatics, structural, and functional analyses of T. p. pallidum genes to identify putative outer membrane proteins (OMPs) resulted in a list of potential vaccine candidates, still very little is known about whether and how transcription of these genes is regulated during infection. This knowledge gap is a limitation to vaccine design, as immunity generated to an antigen that can be down-regulated or even silenced at the transcriptional level without affecting virulence would not induce clearance of the pathogen, hence allowing disease progression. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We report here that tp1031, the T. p. pallidum gene encoding the putative OMP and vaccine candidate TprL is differentially expressed in several T. p. pallidum strains, suggesting transcriptional regulation. Experimental identification of the tprL transcriptional start site revealed that a homopolymeric G sequence of varying length resides within the tprL promoter and that its length affects promoter activity compatible with phase variation. Conversely, in the closely related pathogen T. p. subsp. pertenue, the agent of yaws, where a naturally-occurring deletion has eliminated the tprL promoter region, elements necessary for protein synthesis, and part of the gene ORF, tprL transcription level are negligible compared to T. p. pallidum strains. Accordingly, the humoral response to TprL is absent in yaws-infected laboratory animals and patients compared to syphilis-infected subjects. CONCLUSION: The ability of T. p. pallidum to stochastically vary tprL expression should be considered in any vaccine development effort that includes this antigen. The role of phase variation in contributing to T. p. pallidum antigenic diversity should be further studied.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins/immunology , Bacterial Vaccines/genetics , Bacterial Vaccines/immunology , Treponema pallidum/genetics , Treponema pallidum/immunology , Animals , Antigens, Bacterial/genetics , Antigens, Bacterial/immunology , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Genes, Bacterial/genetics , Humans , Male , Rabbits , Recombinant Proteins , Syphilis/prevention & control , Treponema , Yaws/prevention & control
6.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis ; 15(9): e0009753, 2021 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34492041

ABSTRACT

Immune evasion by Treponema pallidum subspecies pallidum (T. pallidum) has been attributed to antigenic variation of its putative outer-membrane protein TprK. In TprK, amino acid diversity is confined to seven variable (V) regions, and generation of sequence diversity within the V regions occurs via a non-reciprocal segmental gene conversion mechanism where donor cassettes recombine into the tprK expression site. Although previous studies have shown the significant role of immune selection in driving accumulation of TprK variants, the contribution of baseline gene conversion activity to variant diversity is less clear. Here, combining longitudinal tprK deep sequencing of near clonal Chicago C from immunocompetent and immunosuppressed rabbits along with the newly developed in vitro cultivation system for T. pallidum, we directly characterized TprK alleles in the presence and absence of immune selection. Our data confirm significantly greater sequence diversity over time within the V6 region during syphilis infection in immunocompetent rabbits compared to immunosuppressed rabbits, consistent with previous studies on the role of TprK in evasion of the host immune response. Compared to strains grown in immunocompetent rabbits, strains passaged in vitro displayed low level changes in allele frequencies of TprK variable region sequences similar to that of strains passaged in immunosuppressed rabbits. Notably, we found significantly increased rates of V6 allele generation relative to other variable regions in in vitro cultivated T, pallidum strains, illustrating that the diversity within these hypervariable regions occurs in the complete absence of immune selection. Together, our results demonstrate antigenic variation in T. pallidum can be studied in vitro and occurs even in the complete absence of immune pressure, allowing the T. pallidum population to continuously evade the immune system of the infected host.


Subject(s)
Antigens, Bacterial/metabolism , Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Porins/metabolism , Treponema/genetics , Alleles , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Antigenic Variation , Antigens, Bacterial/genetics , Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Genetic Variation , Immune Evasion , Immunocompromised Host , Porins/genetics , Rabbits , Syphilis/microbiology , Transcriptome
7.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis ; 15(12): e0010063, 2021 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34936652

ABSTRACT

In spite of its immutable susceptibility to penicillin, Treponema pallidum (T. pallidum) subsp. pallidum continues to cause millions of cases of syphilis each year worldwide, resulting in significant morbidity and mortality and underscoring the urgency of developing an effective vaccine to curtail the spread of the infection. Several technical challenges, including absence of an in vitro culture system until very recently, have hampered efforts to catalog the diversity of strains collected worldwide. Here, we provide near-complete genomes from 196 T. pallidum strains-including 191 T. pallidum subsp. pallidum-sequenced directly from patient samples collected from 8 countries and 6 continents. Maximum likelihood phylogeny revealed that samples from most sites were predominantly SS14 clade. However, 99% (84/85) of the samples from Madagascar formed two of the five distinct Nichols subclades. Although recombination was uncommon in the evolution of modern circulating strains, we found multiple putative recombination events between T. pallidum subsp. pallidum and subsp. endemicum, shaping the genomes of several subclades. Temporal analysis dated the most recent common ancestor of Nichols and SS14 clades to 1717 (95% HPD: 1543-1869), in agreement with other recent studies. Rates of SNP accumulation varied significantly among subclades, particularly among different Nichols subclades, and was associated in the Nichols A subclade with a C394F substitution in TP0380, a ERCC3-like DNA repair helicase. Our data highlight the role played by variation in genes encoding putative surface-exposed outer membrane proteins in defining separate lineages, and provide a critical resource for the design of broadly protective syphilis vaccines targeting surface antigens.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Vaccines/genetics , Genome, Bacterial , Syphilis/microbiology , Treponema pallidum/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/immunology , Bacterial Vaccines/immunology , Base Sequence , Female , Genetic Variation , Humans , Madagascar , Male , Phylogeny , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Syphilis/immunology , Treponema pallidum/classification , Treponema pallidum/immunology , Treponema pallidum/isolation & purification
8.
Vaccine ; 37(13): 1807-1818, 2019 03 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30797635

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Syphilis is resurgent in many developed countries and still prevalent in developing nations. Current and future control campaigns would benefit from the development of a vaccine, but although promising vaccine candidates were identified among the putative surface-exposed integral outer membrane proteins of the syphilis spirochete, immunization experiments in the rabbit model using recombinant antigens have failed to fully protect animals upon infectious challenge. We speculated that such recombinant immunogens, purified under denaturing conditions from Escherichia coli prior to immunization might not necessarily harbor their original structure, and hypothesized that enhanced protection would result from performing similar immunization/challenge experiments with native antigens. METHODS: To test our hypothesis, we engineered non-infectious Borrelia burgdorferi strains to express the tp0897 (tprK) and tp0435 genes of Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum and immunized two groups of rabbits by injecting recombinant strains intramuscularly with no adjuvant. TprK is a putative integral outer membrane protein of the syphilis agent, while tp0435 encodes the highly immunogenic T. pallidum 17-kDa lipoprotein, a periplasmic antigen that was also shown on the pathogen surface. Following development of a specific host immune response to these antigens as the result of immunization, animals were challenged by intradermal inoculation of T. pallidum. Cutaneous lesion development was monitored and treponemal burden within lesions were assessed by dark-field microscopy and RT-qPCR, in comparison to control rabbits. RESULTS: Partial protection was observed in rabbits immunized with B. burgdorferi expressing TprK while immunity to Tp0435 was not protective. Analysis of the humoral response to TprK antigen suggested reactivity to conformational epitopes. CONCLUSIONS: Immunization with native antigens might not be sufficient to obtain complete protection to infection. Nonetheless we showed that non-infectious B. burgdorferi can be an effective carrier to deliver and elicit a specific host response to T. pallidum antigens to assess the efficacy of syphilis vaccine candidates.


Subject(s)
Antigens, Bacterial/immunology , Bacterial Proteins/immunology , Bacterial Vaccines/immunology , Borrelia burgdorferi/genetics , Gene Expression , Porins/immunology , Syphilis/prevention & control , Treponema pallidum/immunology , Animals , Antibodies, Bacterial/immunology , Antigens, Bacterial/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Vaccines/genetics , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Epitopes/chemistry , Epitopes/immunology , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Immunity, Cellular , Immunization , Mass Spectrometry , Mice , Peptides/chemical synthesis , Peptides/immunology , Porins/chemistry , Porins/genetics , Rabbits , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/immunology , Syphilis/immunology , Syphilis/pathology , Treponema pallidum/genetics
9.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis ; 13(1): e0007076, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30601824

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Gallium is a semi-metallic element known since the 1930s to have antimicrobial activity. This activity stems primarily from gallium's ability to mimic trivalent iron and disrupt specific Fe(III)-dependent pathways, particularly DNA synthesis (due to inhibition of ribonucleotide reductase). Because of its novel mechanism of action, gallium is currently being investigated as a new antibacterial agent, particularly in light of the increasing resistance of many pathogenic bacteria to existing antibiotics. Gallium maltolate (GaM) is being developed as an orally and topically administrable form of gallium. Yaws is a neglected tropical disease affecting mainly the skin and skeletal system of children in underprivileged settings. It is currently the object of a WHO-promoted eradication campaign using mass administration of the macrolide azithromycin, an antibiotic to which the yaws agent Treponema pallidum subsp. pertenue has slowly begun to develop genetic resistance. METHODS: Because yaws transmission is mainly due to direct skin contact with an infectious skin lesion, we evaluated the treponemicidal activity of GaM applied topically to skin lesions in a rabbit model of yaws. Treatment efficacy was evaluated by measuring lesion diameter, treponemal burden in lesion aspirates as determined by dark field microscopy and amplification of treponemal RNA, serology, and immunohistochemistry of biopsied tissue samples. RESULTS: Our results show that topical GaM was effective in reducing treponemal burden in yaws experimental lesions, particularly when applied at the first sign of lesion appearance but, as expected, did not prevent pathogen dissemination. CONCLUSION: Early administration of GaM to yaws lesions could reduce the infectivity of the lesions and thus yaws transmission, potentially contributing to current and future yaws control campaigns.


Subject(s)
Anti-Infective Agents, Local/administration & dosage , Bacterial Load , Organometallic Compounds/administration & dosage , Pyrones/administration & dosage , Treponema pallidum/drug effects , Yaws/drug therapy , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Male , Rabbits , Skin/microbiology , Skin/pathology , Treatment Outcome , Treponema pallidum/isolation & purification , Yaws/microbiology , Yaws/pathology
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL