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Narrowing the Knowledge Gaps on the Duration of Transferred Protective Immunity and on Vaccination Frequency

Title: Narrowing the Knowledge Gaps on the Duration of Transferred Protective Immunity and on Vaccination Frequency
Authors: Gaillard, María Emilia; Bottero, Daniela; Zurita, María Eugenia; Carriquiriborde, Francisco; Aispuro, Pablo Martín; Bartel, Erika; Sabater Martínez, David; Bravo, María Sol; Castuma, Cecilia; Hozbor, Daniela Flavia
Publication Year: 2017
Collection: Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP): SeDiCI (Servicio de Difusión de la Creación Intelectual)
Subject Terms: Biología; Bordetella pertussis; pregnancy immunization; acellular vaccine; protection
Description: Maternal safety through pertussis vaccination and subsequent maternal–fetal-antibody transfer are well documented, but information on infant protection from pertussis by such antibodies and by subsequent vaccinations is scarce. Since mice are used extensively for maternal-vaccination studies, we adopted that model to narrow those gaps in our understanding of maternal pertussis immunization. Accordingly, we vaccinated female mice with commercial acellular pertussis (aP) vaccine and measured offspring protection against Bordetella pertussis challenge and specific-antibody levels with or without revaccination. Maternal immunization protected the offspring against pertussis, with that immune protection transferred to the offspring lasting for several weeks, as evidenced by a reduction (4–5 logs, p < 0.001) in the colony-forming-units recovered from the lungs of 16-week-old offspring. Moreover, maternal-vaccination-acquired immunity from the first pregnancy still conferred protection to offspring up to the fourth pregnancy. Under the conditions of our experimental protocol, protection to offspring from the aP-induced immunity is transferred both transplacentally and through breastfeeding. Adoptive-transfer experiments demonstrated that transferred antibodies were more responsible for the protection detected in offspring than transferred whole spleen cells. In contrast to reported findings, the protection transferred was not lost after the vaccination of infant mice with the same or other vaccine preparations, and conversely, the immunity transferred from mothers did not interfere with the protection conferred by infant vaccination with the same or different vaccines. These results indicated that aP-vaccine immunization of pregnant female mice conferred protective immunity that is transferred both transplacentally and via offspring breastfeeding without compromising the protection boostered by subsequent infant vaccination. These results—though admittedly not necessarily immediately extrapolatable to ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
Relation: http://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/78156
Availability: http://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/78156
Rights: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ; Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Accession Number: edsbas.6C396585
Database: BASE