PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Induction of protective immunity against Chlamydia muridarum intravaginal infection with a chlamydial glycogen phosphorylase.

  • Zhihong Li,
  • Chunxue Lu,
  • Bo Peng,
  • Hao Zeng,
  • Zhiguan Zhou,
  • Yimou Wu,
  • Guangming Zhong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0032997
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
p. e32997

Abstract

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We evaluated 7 C. muridarum ORFs for their ability to induce protection against chlamydial infection in a mouse intravaginal infection model. These antigens, although encoded in C. muridarum genome, are transcriptionally regulated by a cryptic plasmid that is known to contribute to C. muridarum pathogenesis. Of the 7 plasmid-regulated ORFs, the chlamydial glycogen phosphorylase or GlgP, when delivered into mice intramuscularly, induced the most pronounced protective immunity against C. muridarum intravaginal infection. The GlgP-immunized mice displayed a significant reduction in vaginal shedding of live organisms on day 14 after infection. The protection correlated well with a robust C. muridarum-specific antibody and a Th1-dominant T cell responses, which significantly reduced the severity but not overall incidence of hydrosalpinx. The GlgP-induced partial protection against upper genital tract pathology suggests that GlgP may be considered a component for a multi-subunit vaccine. These results have demonstrated that intramuscular immunization of mice with purified proteins can be used to identify vaccine antigens for preventing intravaginal infection with C. trachomatis in humans.