PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

One Dose of Staphylococcus aureus 4C-Staph Vaccine Formulated with a Novel TLR7-Dependent Adjuvant Rapidly Protects Mice through Antibodies, Effector CD4+ T Cells, and IL-17A.

  • Francesca Mancini,
  • Elisabetta Monaci,
  • Giuseppe Lofano,
  • Antonina Torre,
  • Marta Bacconi,
  • Simona Tavarini,
  • Chiara Sammicheli,
  • Letizia Arcidiacono,
  • Bruno Galletti,
  • Donatello Laera,
  • Michele Pallaoro,
  • Giovanna Tuscano,
  • Maria Rita Fontana,
  • Giuliano Bensi,
  • Guido Grandi,
  • Silvia Rossi-Paccani,
  • Sandra Nuti,
  • Rino Rappuoli,
  • Ennio De Gregorio,
  • Fabio Bagnoli,
  • Elisabetta Soldaini,
  • Sylvie Bertholet

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0147767
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. e0147767

Abstract

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A rapidly acting, single dose vaccine against Staphylococcus aureus would be highly beneficial for patients scheduled for major surgeries or in intensive care units. Here we show that one immunization with a multicomponent S. aureus candidate vaccine, 4C-Staph, formulated with a novel TLR7-dependent adjuvant, T7-alum, readily protected mice from death and from bacterial dissemination, both in kidney abscess and peritonitis models, outperforming alum-formulated vaccine. This increased efficacy was paralleled by higher vaccine-specific and α-hemolysin-neutralizing antibody titers and Th1/Th17 cell responses. Antibodies played a crucial protective role, as shown by the lack of protection of 4C-Staph/T7-alum vaccine in B-cell-deficient mice and by serum transfer experiments. Depletion of effector CD4+ T cells not only reduced survival but also increased S. aureus load in kidneys of mice immunized with 4C-Staph/T7-alum. The role of IL-17A in the control of bacterial dissemination in 4C-Staph/T7-alum vaccinated mice was indicated by in vivo neutralization experiments. We conclude that single dose 4C-Staph/T7-alum vaccine promptly and efficiently protected mice against S. aureus through the combined actions of antibodies, CD4+ effector T cells, and IL-17A. These data suggest that inclusion of an adjuvant that induces not only fast antibody responses but also IL-17-producing cell-mediated effector responses could efficaciously protect patients scheduled for major surgeries or in intensive care units.