The aim of vaccination is to rapidly elicit protective immunity and generate memory for sustained protection. We studied the induction and persistence of polysaccharide (PS)-specific memory in neonatal and infant mice primed with pneumococcal conjugate (Pnc1-TT) by assessing the response to native pneumococcal PS (PPS-1), the kinetics of the PPS-1-specific IgG response to a second Pnc1-TT dose and affinity maturation. A subcutaneous (s.c.) Pnc1-TT booster induced a rapid increase in PPS-1-specific IgG, indicating efficient priming for memory by a single dose of Pnc1-TT already at 1 week of age. High levels were maintained for >12 weeks. However, a PPS-1 booster induced no response in neonatal or infant mice. The adjuvant LT-K63 significantly enhanced the IgG response and affinity to Pnc1-TT by both the s.c. and the intranasal (i.n.) route in all age groups. In neonatal and infant mice, PPS-1 and LT-K63 induced a booster response only when given i.n. following either s.c. or i.n. priming with Pnc1-TT and LT-K63. In contrast, PPS-1 with or without LT-K63 administered s.c. compromised the ongoing PPS-1-specific response elicited in neonatal mice by either s.c. or i.n. priming with Pnc1-TT and LT-K63. These results demonstrate the advantage of the mucosal route for elicitation of PS-specific memory responses in early life.
Streptococcus pneumoniae serogroup 6 is an important cause of respiratory tract disease worldwide. Vaccination with 6B polysaccharide induces antibody response to the cross-reacting serotype 6A, but the protective capacity of 6A antibodies induced in infants remains unknown. In this study, passive immunization with serum samples obtained from infants vaccinated with an octavalent polysaccharide protein conjugate vaccine, PncT, protected mice against bacteremia and/or lung infection caused by intranasal challenge with serotypes 6B and 6A. Protective infant serum samples had significantly higher serotype-specific IgG levels and opsonic activity than did nonprotective serum samples. The protective level to either serotype was approximately 1 microg of specific IgG antibodies injected per mouse (corresponding to approximately 0.3 microg/mL). The protection was strongly related to opsonophagocytic antibody levels measured in vitro. These results demonstrate that PncT induces antibodies in infants that protect mice against invasive disease caused by the homologous serotype and by the cross-reacting serotype 6A.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.