CD1 and iNKT cells mediate immune responses against the GBS hemolytic lipid toxin induced by a non-toxic analog
Metadatos
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Furuta, Anna; Coleman, Michelle; Casares López, Raquel; Seepersaud, Ravin; Orvis, Austyn; Brokaw, Alyssa; Quach, Phoenicia; Nguyen, Shayla; Sweeney, Erin; Sharma, Kavita; Wallen, Grace; Sanghavi, Rhea; Mateos-Gil, Jaime; Cuerva Carvajal, Juan Manuel; Millán Delgado, Alba; Rajagopal, LakshmiEditorial
PLOS ONE
Fecha
2023-06-29Referencia bibliográfica
Furuta, A. et. al. PLoS Pathog 19(6): e1011490. [https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1011490]
Patrocinador
National Institutes of Health grants R01AI167421 and R01AI112619 to J.M.C and L.R and R01AI133976, R01AI145890, R01AI152268 to L.R; FEDER/Junta de Andalucía-Consejería de Transformación Económica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades (B-FQM-130-UGR20 and P20_00028); The NIH training grants T32 AI007509 supported A.B and T32 AI055396 supported A. FResumen
Although hemolytic lipids have been discovered from many human pathogens including
Group B Streptococcus (GBS), strategies that neutralize their function are lacking. GBS is a
leading cause of pregnancy-associated neonatal infections, and adult GBS infections are on
the rise. The GBS hemolytic lipid toxin or granadaene, is cytotoxic to many immune cells
including T and B cells. We previously showed that mice immunized with a synthetic nontoxic
analog of granadaene known as R-P4 had reduced bacterial dissemination during systemic
infection. However, mechanisms important for R-P4 mediated immune protection was
not understood. Here, we show that immune serum from R-P4-immunized mice facilitate
GBS opsonophagocytic killing and protect naïve mice from GBS infection. Further, CD4+ T
cells isolated from R-P4-immunized mice proliferated in response to R-P4 stimulation in a
CD1d- and iNKT cell-dependent manner. Consistent with these observations, R-P4 immunized
mice lacking CD1d or CD1d-restricted iNKT cells exhibit elevated bacterial burden.
Additionally, adoptive transfer of iNKT cells from R-P4 vaccinated mice significantly reduced
GBS dissemination compared to adjuvant controls. Finally, maternal R-P4 vaccination provided
protection against ascending GBS infection during pregnancy. These findings are relevant
in the development of therapeutic strategies targeting lipid cytotoxins.