A chimeric influenza virus expressing an epitope of outer membrane protein F of Pseudomonas aeruginosa affords protection against challenge with P. aeruginosa in …

J Staczek, HE Gilleland Jr, LB Gilleland… - Infection and …, 1998 - Am Soc Microbiol
J Staczek, HE Gilleland Jr, LB Gilleland, RN Harty, A Garcia-Sastre, OG Engelhardt…
Infection and immunity, 1998Am Soc Microbiol
The ability of a chimeric influenza virus containing, within the antigenic B site of its
hemagglutinin, an 11-amino-acid (AEGRAINRRVE) insert from the peptide 10 epitope of
outer membrane (OM) protein F of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to serve as a protective
vaccine against P. aeruginosa was tested by using the murine chronic pulmonary infection
model. Mice immunized with the chimeric virus developed antibodies that reacted in an
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with peptide 10, with purified protein F, and with whole …
Abstract
The ability of a chimeric influenza virus containing, within the antigenic B site of its hemagglutinin, an 11-amino-acid (AEGRAINRRVE) insert from the peptide 10 epitope of outer membrane (OM) protein F of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to serve as a protective vaccine against P. aeruginosa was tested by using the murine chronic pulmonary infection model. Mice immunized with the chimeric virus developed antibodies that reacted in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with peptide 10, with purified protein F, and with whole cells of various immunotype strains ofP. aeruginosa but failed to react with a protein F-deficient strain of P. aeruginosa. The chimeric-virus antisera reacted specifically with protein F alone when immunoblotted against proteins extracted from cell envelopes of each of the seven Fisher-Devlin immunotype strains and had significantly greater in vitro opsonic activity for P. aeruginosa than did antisera from wild-type influenza virus-immunized mice. Subsequent to intratracheal challenge with agar-encased cells of P. aeruginosa, chimeric-virus-immunized mice developed significantly fewer severe lung lesions than did control mice immunized with the wild-type influenza virus. Furthermore, the chimeric influenza virus-immunized group had a significantly smaller percentage of mice with >5 × 103 CFU of P. aeruginosa in their lungs upon bacterial quantitation than did the control group. These data indicate that chimeric influenza viruses expressing epitopes of OM protein F warrant continued development as vaccines to prevent pulmonary infections caused by P. aeruginosa.
American Society for Microbiology