Although anticapsular antibodies confer serotype-specific immunity to pneumococci, children increase their ability to clear colonization before these antibodies appear, suggesting involvement of other mechanisms. We previously reported that intranasal immunization of mice with pneumococci confers CD4+ T cell–dependent, antibody- and serotype-independent protection against colonization. Here we show that this immunity, rather than preventing initiation of carriage, accelerates clearance over several days, accompanied by neutrophilic infiltration of the nasopharyngeal mucosa. Adoptive transfer of immune CD4+ T cells was sufficient to confer immunity to naïve RAG1−/− mice. A critical role of interleukin (IL)-17A was demonstrated: mice lacking interferon-γ or IL-4 were protected, but not mice lacking IL-17A receptor or mice with neutrophil depletion. In vitro expression of IL-17A in response to pneumococci was assayed: lymphoid tissue from vaccinated mice expressed significantly more IL-17A than controls, and IL-17A expression from peripheral blood samples from immunized mice predicted protection in vivo. IL-17A was elicited by pneumococcal stimulation of tonsillar cells of children or adult blood but not cord blood. IL-17A increased pneumococcal killing by human neutrophils both in the absence and in the presence of antibodies and complement. We conclude that IL-17A mediates pneumococcal immunity in mice and probably in humans; its elicitation in vitro could help in the development of candidate pneumococcal vaccines.
Acquired immunity to Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) has long been assumed to depend on the presence of anticapsular antibodies. We found, however, that colonization with live pneumococci of serotypes 6B, 7F, or 14 protected mice against recolonization by any of the serotypes and that protection from acquisition of a heterologous or homologous strain did not depend on anticapsular antibody. Further, intranasal immunization by live pneumococcal colonization or by a killed, nonencapsulated wholecell vaccine protected antibody-deficient mice against colonization, suggesting independence of antibodies to any pneumococcal antigens. Protection by intranasal immunization with whole-cell vaccine was completely abrogated in T cell-deficient mice, and in mice that were congenitally deficient in CD4 ؉ T cells or depleted of these cells at the time of challenge. In contrast, mice congenitally deficient in, or depleted of, CD8 ؉ T cells were fully protected. Protection in this model was observed beyond 2 months after immunization, arguing against innate or nonspecific immune mechanisms. Thus, we find that immunity to pneumococcal colonization can be induced in the absence of antibody, independent of the capsular type, and this protection requires the presence of CD4 ؉ T cells at the time of challenge.Streptococcus pneumoniae ͉ cell-mediated immunity ͉ vaccine A lmost 1 million children in the developing world die of infections due to Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) each year (1). Pneumococcus is considered an ''extracellular'' bacterial pathogen, i.e., it is killed upon ingestion by phagocytic cells. Ingestion is facilitated by antibody (Ab) to its capsular polysaccharides (PS), of which there are at least 90 different serotypes. The two existing pneumococcal vaccines are based on injected mixtures of PS. Plain (unconjugated) PS vaccine contains 23 serotypes but is not efficacious in children Ͻ2 years old and therefore fails to protect those at highest risk. Protein-conjugated PS contains seven serotypes and protects infants (2), but it is difficult to manufacture (resulting in repeated shortages), is expensive, needs refrigeration, requires multiple injections, and does not include many of the capsular serotypes that cause pneumococcal disease in the developing world. Furthermore, serotype replacement, whereby pneumococcal serotypes not included in the conjugate vaccine become more prevalent causes of colonization and disease, has already been observed in clinical trials (3) and in epidemiologic studies (4) after implementation of conjugate vaccine immunization programs. Therefore, despite the success of the capsule-based vaccines, alternative strategies are urgently needed.The success of serum therapy (passive transfer of anticapsular Ab from hyperimmune animals) and the efficacy of PS and PS-protein conjugate vaccines have clearly demonstrated that anticapsular Ab alone is sufficient to treat or prevent pneumococcal disease. Furthermore, studies in animals (5) and humans (6) clearly demonstrate that antica...
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