摘要

Francisella tularensis subspecies tularensis is highly virulent for humans especially when it is inhaled. Therefore, it has the potential to be used as a biothreat agent. Vaccines against F. tularensis will need to be approved in accordance with the FDA Animal Rule. This will require identification of robust correlates of protection in experimental animals and the demonstration that similar immune responses are generated in vaccinated humans. Towards this goal, we have developed an experimental live vaccine strain by deleting the gene, clpB, encoding a heat shock protein from virulent subsp. tularensis strain, SCHU S4. SCHU S4 Delta clpB administered intradermally protects BALB/c, but not C57BL/6 mice from subsequent respiratory challenge with wildtype SCHU S4. A comparison of post-vaccination and post-challenge immune responses in these two mouse strains shows an association between several antibody and cytokine responses and protection. In particular, elevated IFN gamma levels in the skin 2 days after vaccination, sero-conversion to hypothetical membrane protein ETT_778c, and to 30S ribosomal protein Si (FTT_0183c) of F. tularensis after 30 days of vaccination, and elevated levels of pulmonary IL-17 on day 7 after respiratory challenge with SCHU S4 were all associated with protection.

  • 出版日期2012-5-21