Several highly attenuated spore-forming nontoxinogenic and nonencapsulated Bacillus anthracis vaccines differing in levels of expression of recombinant protective antigen (rPA) were constructed. Biochemical analyses (including electrospray mass spectroscopy and N terminus amino acid sequencing) as well as biological and immunological tests demonstrated that the rPA retains the characteristics of native PA. A single immunization of guinea pigs with 5 ؋ 10 7 spores of one of these recombinant strains, MASC-10, expressing high levels of rPA (>100 g/ml) from a constitutive heterologous promoter induced high titers of neutralizing anti-PA antibodies. This immune response was long lasting (at least 12 months) and provided protection against a lethal challenge of virulent (Vollum) anthrax spores. The recombinant B. anthracis spore vaccine appears to be more efficacious than the vegetative cell vaccine. Furthermore, while results clearly suggest a direct correlation between the level of expression of PA and the potency of the vaccine, they also suggest that some B. anthracis spore-associated antigen(s) may contribute in a significant manner to protective immunity.The etiological agent of anthrax disease in animals and humans is the spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis. The major factors of virulence of B. anthracis are located on two plasmids, pXO1 and pXO2. pXO2 encodes a poly-D-glutamic acid capsule (19, 41), while pXO1 encodes two binary exotoxins, the lethal toxin (LT) and the edema toxin (ET) (43,46,61). These two toxins are composed of three different proteins: protective antigen (PA), edema factor (EF), and lethal factor (LF) (for a review, see reference 36). PA is the common receptor binding domain of the toxins and can interact with the two different effector domains, EF and LF, to mediate their entry into target cells (14). EF is a calmodulin-dependent adenylate cyclase (37) responsible for the edema seen at the site of infection in experimental animals (17). The LF is a metalloprotease (34) recently shown to cleave the amino termini of the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinases 1 and 2, which results in their inactivation (13). It remains to be determined whether these are the main physiological substrates for the LT activity in vivo (5,22).Two types of anthrax vaccines are licensed for use in humans: the spores of the toxigenic, nonencapsulated B. anthracis STI-1 strain (55) and the cell-free PA-based vaccines consisting of aluminum hydroxide-adsorbed supernatant material from cultures of the toxigenic, nonencapsulated B. anthracis strain V770-NPI-R (49) or alum-precipitated culture filtrate from the Sterne strain (6). The use of the live attenuated STI-1 occasionally results in general and local adverse responses, observed both after primary application and revaccination, and the frequency of responses increases with the number of vaccinations (58). Furthermore, it was reported that the STI-1 vaccine has a relatively low immunogenicity (reviewed by Stepanov et al. in reference 58). To increase the i...
Tumor necrosis factor ␣ (TNF␣) or chronic hyperinsulinemia that induce insulin resistance trigger increased Ser/Thr phosphorylation of the insulin receptor (IR) and of its major insulin receptor substrates, IRS-1 and IRS-2. To unravel the molecular basis for this uncoupling in insulin signaling, we undertook to study the interaction of Ser/Thr-phosphorylated IRS-1 and IRS-2 with the insulin receptor. We could demonstrate that, similar to IRS-1, IRS-2 also interacts with the juxtamembrane (JM) domain (amino acids 943-984) but not with the carboxylterminal region (amino acids 1245-1331) of IR expressed in bacteria as His 6 fusion peptides. Moreover, incubation of rat hepatoma Fao cells with TNF␣, bacterial sphingomyelinase, or other Ser(P)/Thr(P)-elevating agents reduced insulin-induced Tyr phosphorylation of IRS-1 and IRS-2, markedly elevated their Ser(P)/Thr(P) levels, and significantly reduced their ability to interact with the JM region of IR. Withdrawal of TNF␣ for periods as short as 30 min reversed its inhibitory effects on IR-IRS interactions. Similar inhibitory effects were obtained when Fao cells were subjected to prolonged (20 -60 min) pretreatment with insulin. Incubation of the cell extracts with alkaline phosphatase reversed the inhibitory effects of insulin. These findings suggest that insulin resistance is associated with enhanced Ser/Thr phosphorylation of IRS-1 and IRS-2, which impairs their interaction with the JM region of IR. Such impaired interactions abolish the ability of IRS-1 and IRS-2 to undergo insulin-induced Tyr phosphorylation and further propagate the insulin receptor signal. Moreover, the reversibility of the TNF␣ effects and the ability to mimic its action by exogenously added sphingomyelinase argue against the involvement of a proteolytic cascade in mediating the acute inhibitory effects of TNF␣ on insulin action. The insulin receptor (IR)1 is an heterotetrameric transmembrane glycoprotein composed of two extracellular ␣ subunits and two transmembrane  subunits linked by disulfide bonds. The ␣ subunits contain the insulin-binding domain while the transmembrane  subunits function as a tyrosine-specific protein kinase (IRK) that undergoes autophosphorylation following insulin binding (reviewed in Ref. 1). Autophosphorylation activates the IRK (2) and enables it to phosphorylate endogenous protein substrates, including Shc (3) and the insulin receptor substrates IRS-1 (4) and IRS-2 (5), to further propagate the insulin signal. IRS-1 and IRS-2, two related protein substrates of IRK, have a highly conserved amino terminus, which contains a pleckstrin homology domain and a phosphotyrosinebinding (PTB) domain, and a poorly conserved carboxyl terminus with several tyrosine phosphorylation motifs. IRS-1 and IRS-2 also contain over 30 Ser/Thr residues in consensus phosphorylation sites (4, 5). The relative roles of IRS-1 and IRS-2 in mediating insulin action is presently unknown, although IRS-2 functions as an alternative substrate of IR in IRS-1 null mice (6), which manifest a mild form...
Yersinia pestis is the causative agent of plague. Previously we have isolated an attenuated Y. pestis transposon insertion mutant in which the pcm gene was disrupted. In the present study, we investigated the expression and the role of pcm locus genes in Y. pestis pathogenesis using a set of isogenic surE, pcm, nlpD and rpoS mutants of the fully virulent Kimberley53 strain. We show that in Y. pestis, nlpD expression is controlled from elements residing within the upstream genes surE and pcm. The NlpD lipoprotein is the only factor encoded from the pcm locus that is essential for Y. pestis virulence. A chromosomal deletion of the nlpD gene sequence resulted in a drastic reduction in virulence to an LD50 of at least 107 cfu for subcutaneous and airway routes of infection. The mutant was unable to colonize mouse organs following infection. The filamented morphology of the nlpD mutant indicates that NlpD is involved in cell separation; however, deletion of nlpD did not affect in vitro growth rate. Trans-complementation experiments with the Y. pestis nlpD gene restored virulence and all other phenotypic defects. Finally, we demonstrated that subcutaneous administration of the nlpD mutant could protect animals against bubonic and primary pneumonic plague. Taken together, these results demonstrate that Y. pestis NlpD is a novel virulence factor essential for the development of bubonic and pneumonic plague. Further, the nlpD mutant is superior to the EV76 prototype live vaccine strain in immunogenicity and in conferring effective protective immunity. Thus it could serve as a basis for a very potent live vaccine against bubonic and pneumonic plague.
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