Antibody response and protection against challenge in mice vaccinated intraperitoneally with a live aroA O4-O9 hybrid Salmonella dublin strain.

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RESUMO

An auxotrophic Salmonella dublin (O9,12) strain, SL5631, with a deletion affecting gene aroA, was made into a partial diploid expressing the rfb (O-antigen-repeat-unit-specifying) gene cluster of Salmonella typhimurium (O4,12). By use of O4- and O9-specific antisera in indirect immunofluorescence assays, the resulting hybrid SL7103 was shown to express both the O4- and O9-antigen epitopes in the same bacterium. Qualitative and quantitative sugar analyses by gas-liquid chromatography on peralditol acetates of phenol-water-extracted lipopolysaccharides showed that the S. dublin and S. typhimurium repeating units (estimated on the basis of their tyvelose and abequose contents, respectively) were present in approximately equimolar amounts. The SL7103 hybrid auxotroph was avirulent when given intraperitoneally to NMRI mice in a dose of 10(8) CFU and elicited a protective immunity against intraperitoneal challenge with either virulent S. dublin (50% lethal dose of ca. 1.5 x 10(4) CFU versus < 1 x 10(1) CFU in nonimmunized mice) or virulent S. typhimurium (50% lethal dose of ca. 1 x 10(5) versus < 1 x 10(1) CFU in nonimmunized mice). Compared with the protection elicited in homologous systems (S. dublin SL5631 against S. dublin and S. typhimurium SL1479 against S. typhimurium), the protective efficacy of the hybrid was reduced approximately 70-fold against S. dublin challenge and 100-fold against S. typhimurium challenge. Vaccination with S. typhimurium SL1479 conferred no protection against S. dublin challenge, and vaccination with S. dublin SL5631 conferred no protection against S. typhimurium challenge. The protection elicited by the hybrid strain SL7103 is supposed to be mainly a consequence of serum antibodies directed against the immunodominant O4 and O9 epitopes.

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