Vaccines (Jul 2020)

The Role of Virulence Proteins in Protection Conferred by <i>Bordetella pertussis</i> Outer Membrane Vesicle Vaccines

  • René H. M. Raeven,
  • Naomi van Vlies,
  • Merijn L. M. Salverda,
  • Larissa van der Maas,
  • Joost P. Uittenbogaard,
  • Tim H. E. Bindels,
  • Jolanda Rigters,
  • Lisa M. Verhagen,
  • Sabine Kruijer,
  • Elly van Riet,
  • Bernard Metz,
  • Arno A. J. van der Ark

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines8030429
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
p. 429

Abstract

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The limited protective immunity induced by acellular pertussis vaccines demands development of novel vaccines that induce broader and longer-lived immunity. In this study, we investigated the protective capacity of outer membrane vesicle pertussis vaccines (omvPV) with different antigenic composition in mice to gain insight into which antigens contribute to protection. We showed that total depletion of virulence factors (bvg(-) mode) in omvPV led to diminished protection despite the presence of high antibody levels. Antibody profiling revealed overlap in humoral responses induced by vaccines in bvg(-) and bvg(+) mode, but the potentially protective responses in the bvg(+) vaccine were mainly directed against virulence-associated outer membrane proteins (virOMPs) such as BrkA and Vag8. However, deletion of either BrkA or Vag8 in our outer membrane vesicle vaccines did not affect the level of protection. In addition, the vaccine-induced immunity profile, which encompasses broad antibody and mixed T-helper 1, 2 and 17 responses, was not changed. We conclude that the presence of multiple virOMPs in omvPV is crucial for protection against Bordetella pertussis. This protective immunity does not depend on individual proteins, as their absence or low abundance can be compensated for by other virOMPs.

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