EP0350555A1 - Transformed shigella - Google Patents
Transformed shigellaInfo
- Publication number
- EP0350555A1 EP0350555A1 EP88401842.5A EP88401842A EP0350555A1 EP 0350555 A1 EP0350555 A1 EP 0350555A1 EP 88401842 A EP88401842 A EP 88401842A EP 0350555 A1 EP0350555 A1 EP 0350555A1
- Authority
- EP
- European Patent Office
- Prior art keywords
- shigella
- cells
- gene
- infected
- host
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Pending
Links
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Definitions
- This invention relates to a method of modifying the genome of an entero-invasive wild strain of Shigella so that the strain cannot substantially invade cells of an infected host and cannot spread substantially within infected cells and between infected and non-infected cells of the host and cannot produce toxins which will kill substantial numbers of the hosts' cells.
- This invention particularly relates to such a modified strain of Shigella which can be used to immunize a host against the wild strain of Shigella .
- Shigellosis or bacillary dysentery is a disease that is endemic throughout the world. The disease presents a particularly serious public health problem in tropical regions and developing countries where Shigella dysenteriae 1 and S . flexneri predominate.
- the principal etiologic agent is S . sonnei although sporadic cases of shigellosis are encountered due to S . flexneri , S . boydii and certain entero-invasive Escherichia coli .
- Mucosal invasion encompasses several steps which include penetration of the bacteria into epithelial cells, intracellular multiplication, killing of host cells, and final spreading to adjacent cells and to connective tissue (9, 41, 55, 56).
- the overall process which is usually limited to the mucosal surface leads to a strong inflammatory reaction which is responsible for abscesses and ulcerations (23, 41, 55).
- dysentery is characteristic of shigellosis, it may be preceded by watery diarrhea. Diarrhea appears to be the result of disturbances in colonic reabsorption and increased jejunal secretion whereas dysentery is a purely colonic process (20, 41). Systemic manifestations may also be observed in the course of shigellosis, mainly in the cases due to S . dysenteriae 1. These include toxic megacolon, leukemo ⁇ d reactions and hemolytic-uremic syndrome ("HUS"). The latter is a major cause of mortality from shigellosis in developing areas (11, 22, 38).
- HUS hemolytic-uremic syndrome
- Shiga -toxin produced at high level by S . dysenteriae 1 (6) and Shiga-like toxins ("SLT") produced at low level by S . flexneri and S . sonnei (19, 30) in the four major stages of shigellosis (i.e., invasion of individual epithelial cells, tissue invasion, diarrhea and systemic symptoms) is not well understood.
- SLT Shiga-like toxins
- Plasmids of 180-220 kilobases (“kb”) are essential in all Shigella species for invasion of individual epithelial cells (41, 42, 44). This includes entry, intracellular multiplication and early killing of host cells (4, 5, 46).
- Shiga -toxin and SLT at this stage are unclear. They do not appear to play a crucial role in intracellular multiplication and early killing (4, 12, 46). However none of the experiments which have been carried out has compared isogenic mutants in a relevant cell assay system. Recent evidence indicates that Shiga -toxin is cytotoxic for primary cultures of human colonic cells (27). Tissue invasion requires additional chromosomally encoded products among which are smooth lipopolysaccharides (“LPS”) (44, 57), the non characterized product of the Kcp locus (8, 44), and aerobactin (24, 28) A region of the S .
- LPS smooth lipopolysaccharides
- a mutant which lacks Shiga -toxin or SLT could indicate the role of these toxins in the disease process.
- S . dysenteriae 1 which produces the highest amount of this cytotoxin, could be transformed into such a Shiga - toxin negative mutant ("Tox ⁇ ") and could serve best to indicate the role of the toxin -- despite Sekizaki et al's (48) having obtained such a mutant which appeared as invasive in the HeLa cell assay and the Sereny test (49) as the wild strain.
- Such a Tox ⁇ mutant could be used to make a mutant which could not invade, and then multiply substantially within, cells of a host and also could not spread substantially within the host's infected cells and from there to the host's uninfected cells and also could not produce toxins which would kill subtantial numbers of infected, as well as uninfected, host cells.
- the Tox ⁇ mutant could be used to immunize a host against a wild strain of the Shigella .
- a Tox ⁇ mutant of a wild strain of S . dysenteriae 1 is genetically engineered by allelic exchange with an in vitro mutagenized Shiga -toxin gene.
- the effect of this mutation in cell assay systems and animals shows that the mutant can be genetically engineered further to provide a mutant which cannot substantially invade and then spread within and between host cells and cannot produce Shiga - toxins in host cells.
- the Tox ⁇ mutant of the wild strain of S . dysenteriae 1 is genetically engineered further by allelic exchange with:
- a mutant of a wild strain of S . flexneri is genetically engineered by allelic exchange with: a) an in vitro mutagenized gene of S . flexneri which encodes a protein necessary for S . flexneri to invade a host's cells, such as a gene which codes for a protein necessary for the chelation of iron and/or the transport of iron into S . flexneri (e.g., an aerobactin gene of S . flexneri ); and b) an in vitro mutagenized gene which encodes a protein necessary for S . flexneri to spread within and between the host's cells, such as an ics A gene.
- an in vitro mutagenized gene of S . flexneri which encodes a protein necessary for S . flexneri to invade a host's cells, such as a gene which codes for a protein necessary for the chelation of iron and/or the transport of iron into S . flexneri (e.g.
- mutants of Shigella of this invention are used for making vaccines against the wild strains of Shigella .
- the Figure shows schematically the cloning of the Shiga -toxin operon and in vitro mutagenesis of the Shiga -toxin A subunit gene in Example 2.
- plasmids pHS7201, pHS7202 and pHS7203 in the Figure Solid lines indicate sequences from the A subunit gene; Stippled lines indicate B subunit gene sequences; and Stripped lines indicate sequences from the ⁇ insertion element.
- the wild strain of Shigella is modified so that it cannot invade and then multiply substantially within infected cells of a host, particularly a human host, and cannot spread substantially within infected cells and from infected to uninfected cells of the host and cannot produce toxins which will kill substantial numbers of the host's infected, as well as uninfected, cells.
- the method involves transforming the genome (e.g., the large virulence plasmid pHS7200) of the wild strain of Shigella , such as an S .
- the method preferably involves also substantially removing or inactivating the gene(s) in the genome of the strain coding for Shiga -toxin.
- the genes of Shigella can be removed or inactivated in a conventional manner, for example by allelic exchange with in vitro mutagenized genes.
- the cells of the modified strain can be cultured and then attenuated in a conventional manner.
- the cells can then be mixed with conventional pharmaceutically acceptable vehicles (e.g., an aqueous saline solution) and optionally with conventional excipients (e.g., a pharmaceutically acceptable detergent) to form a vaccine against the wild strain.
- conventional pharmaceutically acceptable vehicles e.g., an aqueous saline solution
- excipients e.g., a pharmaceutically acceptable detergent
- the vaccine can be formulated to contain a final concentration of cell material in the range of 0.2 to 5 mg/ml, preferably 0.5 to 2 mg/ml.
- the vaccine can be incorporated into a sterile container which is then sealed and stored at a low temperature (e.g., 4°C), or it can be freeze dried.
- one or more doses of the vaccine can be administered in doses containing about 109-1011 lyophilized Shigella cells.
- the vaccine can be administered orally in a conventional manner.
- the treatment can consist of a single dose of vaccine or a plurality of doses over a period of time.
- strains used in the Examples, and their phage or plasmid content are set forth in Table I.
- M9 minimal medium Na2 HPO4 . 12H2 O: 15 g/l
- KH2 PO4 3 g/l
- NaCl 0.5 g/l
- NH4 Cl 1 g/l
- MgSO4 . 7H2 O 0.05 g/l
- Trypto Casein Soja Broth Diagnostics Pasteur, Marnes la Coquette, France
- Total DNA was prepared (50) from a wild type antibiotic-sensitive S . dysenteriae 1 strain SC500 obtained from Centre National de Réfonic des Shigelles of Institut Pasteur, Paris, France. 10 ⁇ g of DNA were digested with Eco RI (Amersham, Buckinghamshire, UK) and loaded on a 0.7% agarose gel. Fragments ranging from 3.5 to 4.5 kb were electroeluted. 0.1 ⁇ g of purified fragments was ligated to 1 ⁇ g of cos-ligated, Eco RI cut, dephosphorylated ⁇ GT11 arms (Stratagene Cloning System, San Diego, USA) and packaged using Packagene System (Progema Biotec, Madison, USA) according to the suppliers recommendations.
- the packaged DNA was then transfected into E . coli Y1090(59).
- the ⁇ GT11 bank was then screened with 13C4, a monoclonal antibody specific for the B subunit of SLT1 (54) obtained from A.D. O'Brien, U.S.U.S.H., Bethesda, MD, USA.
- 103 recombinant phages were plated on Y1090 in LB soft agar. Plates were incubated at 37°C for 12 hours.
- a nitrocellulose filter (Schleicher and Schüll, Dassel, FRG), previously dipped into a 10 mM isopropylthiogalactoside ("IPTG") solution (Sigma, St Louis, MO, USA) was applied to the plate which was then incubated at 42°C for 2.5 hours.
- IPTG isopropylthiogalactoside
- the filter was removed from the plate and incubated 1 hour at 37°C in PBS-milk (50 g/l dehydrated low-fat milk in 1 x PBS), washed five times with 1 x PBS, and incubated for 1 hour with the 13C4 monoclonal antibody in its non-diluted hybridoma cell supernatant.
- the filter was incubated 1 hour at 37°C in PBS-milk containing a 1/200 dilution of sheep anti-mouse IgG antibody conjugated with alkaline phosphatase (Biosys, Compiègne, France). The filter was washed again in 1 x PBS and placed in the staining solution: 0.33 mg/l nitro-blue tetrazolium, 0.16 mg/l 5-bromo-4-chloro-3- indolyl phosphate (both compounds from Sigma), 100 mM Tris HCl pH 9.5, 100 mM NaCl, 50 mM MgCl2.
- E . coli JM83 Positive clones were plaque purified and transfected into Y1089 (59). DNA was then prepared from the lysogen (13). Subcloning was done in the Eco RI site of plasmid vector pUC8 in E . coli JM83 (58). Subclones of E . coli JM83 were tested with monoclonal antibody 13C4 as described above with the following modifications: a dry nitrocellulose filter was applied onto the plate and 2ml of a 2mg/l polymyxin B solution in PBS were added on top of the filter. The plate was then incubated at 37°C for 45 minutes before starting PBS-milk incubation. Subclone pHS7201 in E . coli JM83, containing the B subunit of SLT1, was identified.
- Subclone pHS7201 of E . coli JM83 was found to have a stronger signal in colony immunoblot assay in the presence of 13C4 monoclonal antibody than parental strain SC500 due to the gene dosage effect.
- a restriction map of the Shiga -toxin coding region within pHS7201 was identical to that of SLT1 (14). The A subunit gene was seen to possess a unique Hpa 1 site located 310 bp downstream from the ATG starting codon where a cassette could be inserted as described in Example 2.
- Example 2 In vitro mutagenesis of the Shiga-toxin A subunit gene
- subclone pHS7201 the entire Shiga -toxin operon is contained in a 4.2kb Eco RI DNA fragment.
- In vitro mutagenesis of the A subunit gene was done by inserting the interposon ⁇ (37) which codes for spectinomycin resistance and is flanked on each side by T4 translation transcription stop-signals.
- ⁇ was purified as an Hind III 2kb fragment, and its ends were filled in by the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I.
- ⁇ was then ligated to Hpa I linearized pHS7201 to generate the recombinant plasmid pHS7202 as shown in the Figure.
- pJM703.1 replicates only if its deficient R6K origin is complemented in-trans by the pir function contained in the lambda phage integrated in the genome of E . coli SM10 (21). This strain also contains the transfer genes of the broad host range IncP-type plasmid RP4 integrated in its chromosome. pJM703.1 can thus be mobilized by SM10 ⁇ pir (21) because it contains the Mob site from RP4 (51).
- pHS7203 was thus stably maintained in strain SM10 ⁇ pir and was then conjugally transferred into wild type S . dysenteriae 1 strain SC500. Matings were performed on cellophane membranes, selection was obtained by plating on M9 minimal medium supplemented with thiamine, methionine, tryptophan and nicotinic acid at a concentration of 10 ⁇ g/ml each, 0.2% glucose and 50 ⁇ g/ml spectinomycin. Colonies growing on selective medium were purified and identified as S . dysenteriae 1 by agglutination with a specific rabbit antiserum (Diagnostics Pasteur).
- the presence of the Tox ⁇ modification in the genomes of the S . dysenteriae 1 cells was verified with a probe made from the 655 bp Hind III- Hinc II fragment containing part of the A subunit gene and the entire B subunit gene from the 4.2 kb Eco RI fragment, described above, containing the entire Shiga -toxin operon.
- the 2 kb Hind III fragment, described above, containing the ⁇ interposon, was also used as a probe (37).
- the DNA fragments, used as the probes were labeled by nick- translation (39) with 32p-labeled 5′-dCTP (Amersham).
- Total DNA was prepared from two Tox ⁇ clones and analyzed by hybridization with the Shiga -toxin probe and the ⁇ probe.
- the DNA fragments were transferred from agarose gels to nitrocellulose filters (Schleicher and Schüll) by the method of Southern (53). Hybridization was carried out at 65°C overnight, and washing was done at 65°C in 6xSSC.
- the probes showed that the 4.2 kb Eco RI fragment from S . dysenteriae 1 containing the toxin genes had been replaced in the Tox ⁇ mutants by the 6.2 kb fragment, which hybridized with both probes. This result showed that the flanking regions on each side of the mutagenized toxin gene in pHS7203 had recombined with their counterparts in the SC500 genome, thus replacing the wild-type A subunit gene by the mutated gene.
- SC501 One of these Tox ⁇ clones, SC501, was selected for further study, and clone SC501 was deposited with the Centre Nationale de Cultures de Microorganismes of Institut Pasteur, Paris, France, under accession no. I-774, on June 30, 1988.
- Example 3 Assays of cytotoxicity, growth within HeLa cells, macrophage detachment and toxicity in Rabbit ileal loop and in monkey
- SC500 and SC501 were grown for 48 hours in 200 ml of iron- depleted medium. Glassware was pretreated with 6N HCl and rinsed extensively with iron free H2O.
- the medium contained M9 salts supplemented with 15 ⁇ g/ml CaCl2, 5mg/ml casamino-acids, 2mg/ml glucose, 50 ⁇ g/ml thiamine, 20 ⁇ g/ml L-tryptophane, 10 ⁇ g/ml nicotinic acid and 150 ⁇ g/ml human transferrin (Sigma).
- the bacteria were washed twice in saline and resuspended in 3 ml of PBS. Lysozyme was added at a final concentration of 0.2 mg/ml.
- Assay for macrophage detachment and killing was performed (4) using J774 macrophages (52) maintained in RPMI 1640 (Flow Laboratories Inc., McLean, VA, USA) supplemented with complement-inactivated foetal calf serum (Gibco) and 2 mM glutamine (Gibco). Eighteen hours before infection, 7 x 105 macrophages in 35 mm plastic tissue culture dishes (Becton Dickinson Labware) were labeled in a culture medium containing 0.5 ⁇ Ci of [3H] uridine per ml (Amersham). Cells were washed three times with EBSS before addition of 1 ml of the bacterial suspension in RPMI 1640 at a MOI of 100.
- Infection was performed for one hour at 37°C in 5% CO2. Monolayers were then washed three times with EBSS (To) and covered for one hour at 37°C in 5% CO2 with 2 ml of RPMI supplemented with 2 mM glutamine and gentamicin 25 ⁇ g/ml (T1). Plates were then washed three times with EBSS and incubated in 5% CO2 for 3 more hours (T1-T4) at 37°C in RPMI glucose without gentamicin. Two plates were removed every hour, cultures were washed three times with EBSS and the percentage of non viable macrophages among cells that still adhered to the plastic surface was determined by trypan blue staining.
- the percentage of residual macrophages was then determined by measuring the amount of radioactivity remaining in the dish.
- Adherent cells were lysed with 1 ml of 0.5% sodium deoxycholate in distilled water and 100 ⁇ l of this lysate was precipitated and counted (4).
- Rabbit ligated ileal loops of 10 cm were prepared in rabbits of ca. 2 kg which were anesthesized with 0.5 ml/kg of 6% sodium pentobarbital. Inocula of 107 and 109 CFU in 1 ml of Trypticase Soy Broth were tested. Rabbits were sacrificed 18 hours later. Fluid accumulation within loops was recorded, and the volume-to-length ration ("V/L") was calculated. Portions of infected loops were fixed in 10% buffered formalin. Specimens were processed by standard procedures and stained with hematoxylin eosin-safranin.
- Intensity of each of these symptoms was graded from 0 to 3+ every day. For each animal, the severity of a given symptom was expressed as an index which represented a sum of the accumulated "+" for each symptom. Immediate autopsy was performed in monkeys who died of fulminant dysentery. Species ware processed as described above for rabbit tissues.
- SM10 ⁇ pir (pHS7203) was noncytotoxic in the cytotoxicity assay. After conjugative transfer of pHS7203 into S . dysenteriae , clones that displayed the Amp S Spc R phenotype were tested in the colony immunoblot assay. Five per cent displayed a Tox ⁇ phenotype. SC501 showed a cytotoxicity of 347 CD50/mg of protein, which was the same order of magnitude as that of well-known E . coli K12 (412 CD50/mg). Residual cytotoxicity from SC501 could not be neutralized by an anti- Shiga -toxin polyclonal serum.
- the inflammatory infiltrate of the peritoneal mesothelium which was characteristic of animals infected with SC500 as compared to SC501, was predominantly perivascular thus confirming the gross examination which suggested the presence of a severe peritoneal vasculitis.
- the most striking difference was observed at the level of the capillary circulation within the interglandular chorion.
- Monkeys infected with SC500 showed hemorrhages dirupting the structure of the upper part of the mucosa. Erythrocytes could be observed being released into the intestinal luman through microabscesses which caused local interruption of the epithelial lining. These hemorrhages were obviously due to destruction of the capillary loops.
- the Tox ⁇ mutant of S . dysenteriae 1, SC501, has been shown to produce a residual amount of cytotoxin similar to E . coli K12. This mutant has been used to study the role of this Shiga -toxin in the virulence of S . dysenteriae 1. Cellular assays and more definitive animal models have been used.
- Shiga -toxin does not play a major role at the intracellular stage of infection. Invasion appears to trigger early metabolic events which mediate killing of host cells (47) more rapidly than the slow acting process of Shiga -toxin (12).
- Shiga -toxin plays a limited role when released intracellularly within epithelial and phagocytic cells.
- Shiga -toxin released within infected tissues appears to act predominantly through intestinal vascular damage.
- SC501 is genetically engineered by in vitro mutagenesis of its operon coding for enterochelin.
- the suicide plasmid vector pJM703.1 that is utilized, contains the enterochelin operon of S . dysenteriae 1, with each of its ent F, Fep E, Fep C and Fep D subunit genes mutagenized with an interposon which codes for resistance to the herbicide Biolafos and a suitable promoter for the herbicide resistance gene.
- the resulting clone, SC504 is Tox ⁇ and enterochelin ⁇ ("Ent ⁇ ").
- SC504 is genetically engineered by in vitro mutagenesis of its ics A gene.
- the suicide plasmid vector pJM703.1 that is used, contains the ics A gene of S . flexneri , which has been mutagenized with an interposon.
- the resulting clone, SC505, is Tox ⁇ , Ent ⁇ and ics A ⁇ and can be used in making a vaccine against S . dysenteriae 1.
- Example 2 Using the procedure of Example 2, a wild-type S . flexneri is genetically engineered by in vitro mutagenesis of its gene coding for aerobactin and its ics A gene.
- the suicide plasmid vector that is used, contains the aerobactin and ics A genes of S . flexneri which have each been mutagenized with an interposon.
- the resulting clone SC506 is aerobactin ⁇ and ics A ⁇ and can be used in making a vaccine against S . flexneri .
Abstract
A method for modifying a wild strain of an entero
invasive Shigella to produce a modified strain of
Shigella that can be used for making a vaccine against
the wild strain of Shigella. The genome of the wild
strain of Shigella is transformed so that it cannot
substantially invade cells of a human host and cannot
spread substantially within infected cells and from
infected to uninfected cells of the host and cannot
produce toxins which will kill substantial numbers of the
host's infected, as well as uninfected, cells. A first
gene of the wild strain of Shigella, coding for a protein
necessary for the Shigella to invade cells of the host,
and a second gene, coding for a protein necessary for the
Shigella to spread within infected cells and between the
infected and uninfected cells of the host, are
mutagenized.
Description
This invention relates to a method of modifying the
genome of an entero-invasive wild strain of Shigella so
that the strain cannot substantially invade cells of an
infected host and cannot spread substantially within
infected cells and between infected and non-infected
cells of the host and cannot produce toxins which will
kill substantial numbers of the hosts' cells. This
invention particularly relates to such a modified strain
of Shigella which can be used to immunize a host against
the wild strain of Shigella.
Shigellosis or bacillary dysentery is a disease that
is endemic throughout the world. The disease presents a
particularly serious public health problem in tropical
regions and developing countries where Shigella
dysenteriae 1 and S. flexneri predominate. In
industrialized countries, the principal etiologic agent
is S. sonnei although sporadic cases of shigellosis are
encountered due to S. flexneri, S. boydii and certain
entero-invasive Escherichia coli.
The primary step in the pathogenesis of bacillary
dysentery is invasion of the human colonic mucosa by
Shigella (23). Mucosal invasion encompasses several steps
which include penetration of the bacteria into epithelial
cells, intracellular multiplication, killing of host
cells, and final spreading to adjacent cells and to
connective tissue (9, 41, 55, 56). The overall process
which is usually limited to the mucosal surface leads to
a strong inflammatory reaction which is responsible for
abscesses and ulcerations (23, 41, 55).
Even though dysentery is characteristic of
shigellosis, it may be preceded by watery diarrhea.
Diarrhea appears to be the result of disturbances in
colonic reabsorption and increased jejunal secretion
whereas dysentery is a purely colonic process (20, 41).
Systemic manifestations may also be observed in the
course of shigellosis, mainly in the cases due to S.
dysenteriae 1. These include toxic megacolon, leukemoïd
reactions and hemolytic-uremic syndrome ("HUS"). The
latter is a major cause of mortality from shigellosis in
developing areas (11, 22, 38).
The role of Shiga-toxin produced at high level by S.
dysenteriae 1 (6) and Shiga-like toxins ("SLT") produced
at low level by S. flexneri and S. sonnei (19, 30) in the
four major stages of shigellosis (i.e., invasion of
individual epithelial cells, tissue invasion, diarrhea
and systemic symptoms) is not well understood. For review
see O'Brien and Holmes (32). Plasmids of 180-220
kilobases ("kb") are essential in all Shigella species
for invasion of individual epithelial cells (41, 42, 44).
This includes entry, intracellular multiplication and
early killing of host cells (4, 5, 46). The role of
Shiga-toxin and SLT at this stage is unclear. They do not
appear to play a crucial role in intracellular
multiplication and early killing (4, 12, 46). However
none of the experiments which have been carried out has
compared isogenic mutants in a relevant cell assay
system. Recent evidence indicates that Shiga-toxin is
cytotoxic for primary cultures of human colonic cells
(27). Tissue invasion requires additional chromosomally
encoded products among which are smooth
lipopolysaccharides ("LPS") (44, 57), the non
characterized product of the Kcp locus (8, 44), and
aerobactin (24, 28) A region of the S. flexneri
chromosome necessary for fluid production in rabbit ileal
loops has been localized to the rha-mtl regions and near
the lysine decarboxylase locus (44). However, no evidence
has been adduced to show that the ability to cause fluid
accumulation is due to the SLT of S. flexneri. Thus, the
role of Shiga-toxin in causing the systemic complications
of shigellosis is still hypothetical. However, Shiga-
toxin can mediate vascular damage since capillary lesions
observed in HUS resemble those observed in cerebral
vessels of animals injected with this toxin (1, 2, 22).
A mutant which lacks Shiga-toxin or SLT could
indicate the role of these toxins in the disease process.
S. dysenteriae 1, which produces the highest amount of
this cytotoxin, could be transformed into such a Shiga-
toxin negative mutant ("Tox⁻") and could serve best to
indicate the role of the toxin -- despite Sekizaki et
al's (48) having obtained such a mutant which appeared as
invasive in the HeLa cell assay and the Sereny test (49)
as the wild strain. More importantly, such a Tox⁻ mutant
could be used to make a mutant which could not invade,
and then multiply substantially within, cells of a host
and also could not spread substantially within the host's
infected cells and from there to the host's uninfected
cells and also could not produce toxins which would kill
subtantial numbers of infected, as well as uninfected,
host cells. As a result, the Tox⁻ mutant could be used to
immunize a host against a wild strain of the Shigella.
A Tox⁻ mutant of a wild strain of S. dysenteriae 1
is genetically engineered by allelic exchange with an in
vitro mutagenized Shiga-toxin gene. The effect of this
mutation in cell assay systems and animals shows that the
mutant can be genetically engineered further to provide a
mutant which cannot substantially invade and then spread
within and between host cells and cannot produce Shiga-
toxins in host cells.
Also in accordance with the invention, the Tox⁻
mutant of the wild strain of S. dysenteriae 1 is
genetically engineered further by allelic exchange with:
Further in accordance with this invention, a mutant
of a wild strain of S. flexneri is genetically engineered
by allelic exchange with: a) an in vitro mutagenized gene
of S. flexneri which encodes a protein necessary for S.
flexneri to invade a host's cells, such as a gene which
codes for a protein necessary for the chelation of iron
and/or the transport of iron into S. flexneri (e.g., an
aerobactin gene of S. flexneri); and b) an in vitro
mutagenized gene which encodes a protein necessary for S.
flexneri to spread within and between the host's cells,
such as an ics A gene.
Still further in accordance with this invention, the
mutants of Shigella of this invention are used for making
vaccines against the wild strains of Shigella.
The Figure shows schematically the cloning of the
Shiga-toxin operon and in vitro mutagenesis of the
Shiga-toxin A subunit gene in Example 2. In plasmids
pHS7201, pHS7202 and pHS7203 in the Figure: Solid lines
indicate sequences from the A subunit gene; Stippled
lines indicate B subunit gene sequences; and Stripped
lines indicate sequences from the Ω insertion element.
A method is provided for modifying a wild strain of
an entero-invasive Shigella so that the modified strain
can be used for making a vaccine against the wild strain
of Shigella. The wild strain of Shigella is modified so
that it cannot invade and then multiply substantially
within infected cells of a host, particularly a human
host, and cannot spread substantially within infected
cells and from infected to uninfected cells of the host
and cannot produce toxins which will kill substantial
numbers of the host's infected, as well as uninfected,
cells. The method involves transforming the genome (e.g.,
the large virulence plasmid pHS7200) of the wild strain
of Shigella, such as an S. flexneri, so that gene(s) of
the wild strain, coding for one or more proteins
necessary for the strain to invade an infected host's
cells (e.g., an aerobactin gene) and coding for one or
more proteins necessary for the strain to spread within
and between the infected host's cells (e.g., an ics A
gene), are substantially removed or inactivated. For
transforming a wild strain such as a S. dysenteriae 1,
the method preferably involves also substantially
removing or inactivating the gene(s) in the genome of the
strain coding for Shiga-toxin.
In the method of this invention, the genes of
Shigella can be removed or inactivated in a conventional
manner, for example by allelic exchange with in vitro
mutagenized genes.
The cells of the modified strain can be cultured and
then attenuated in a conventional manner. The cells can
then be mixed with conventional pharmaceutically
acceptable vehicles (e.g., an aqueous saline solution)
and optionally with conventional excipients (e.g., a
pharmaceutically acceptable detergent) to form a vaccine
against the wild strain. The vaccine can be formulated to
contain a final concentration of cell material in the
range of 0.2 to 5 mg/ml, preferably 0.5 to 2 mg/ml. After
formulation, the vaccine can be incorporated into a
sterile container which is then sealed and stored at a
low temperature (e.g., 4°C), or it can be freeze dried.
In order to induce immunity in a human host to a
wild strain of Shigella, one or more doses of the
vaccine, suitably formulated, can be administered in
doses containing about 10⁹-10¹¹ lyophilized Shigella
cells. The vaccine can be administered orally in a
conventional manner. The treatment can consist of a
single dose of vaccine or a plurality of doses over a
period of time.
The Examples, which follow, illustrate this
invention.
Unless otherwise indicated, the cloning and
transformation procedures and techniques used in the
Examples are the same as are generally described in
Maniatis et al, "Molecular Cloning -- A Laboratory
Manual", Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (1982).
The strains, used in the Examples, and their phage
or plasmid content are set forth in Table I.
Two media were used in the Examples: M9 minimal
medium (Na₂ HPO₄ . 12H₂ O: 15 g/l, KH₂ PO₄: 3 g/l, NaCl: 0.5
g/l, NH₄ Cl: 1 g/l, MgSO₄ . 7H₂ O: 0.05 g/l) and Trypto
Casein Soja Broth (Diagnostics Pasteur, Marnes la
Coquette, France).
Total DNA was prepared (50) from a wild type
antibiotic-sensitive S. dysenteriae 1 strain SC500
obtained from Centre National de Référence des Shigelles
of Institut Pasteur, Paris, France. 10 µg of DNA were
digested with EcoRI (Amersham, Buckinghamshire, UK) and
loaded on a 0.7% agarose gel. Fragments ranging from 3.5
to 4.5 kb were electroeluted. 0.1 µg of purified
fragments was ligated to 1 µg of cos-ligated, EcoRI cut,
dephosphorylated λ GT11 arms (Stratagene Cloning System,
San Diego, USA) and packaged using Packagene System
(Progema Biotec, Madison, USA) according to the suppliers
recommendations. The packaged DNA was then transfected
into E. coli Y1090(59). The λ GT11 bank was then
screened with 13C4, a monoclonal antibody specific for
the B subunit of SLT1 (54) obtained from A.D. O'Brien,
U.S.U.S.H., Bethesda, MD, USA. 10³ recombinant phages
were plated on Y1090 in LB soft agar. Plates were
incubated at 37°C for 12 hours. A nitrocellulose filter
(Schleicher and Schüll, Dassel, FRG), previously dipped
into a 10 mM isopropylthiogalactoside ("IPTG") solution
(Sigma, St Louis, MO, USA) was applied to the plate which
was then incubated at 42°C for 2.5 hours. The filter was
removed from the plate and incubated 1 hour at 37°C in
PBS-milk (50 g/l dehydrated low-fat milk in 1 x PBS),
washed five times with 1 x PBS, and incubated for 1 hour
with the 13C4 monoclonal antibody in its non-diluted
hybridoma cell supernatant. After five washes in PBS-
milk, the filter was incubated 1 hour at 37°C in PBS-milk
containing a 1/200 dilution of sheep anti-mouse IgG
antibody conjugated with alkaline phosphatase (Biosys,
Compiègne, France). The filter was washed again in 1 x
PBS and placed in the staining solution: 0.33 mg/l
nitro-blue tetrazolium, 0.16 mg/l 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-
indolyl phosphate (both compounds from Sigma), 100 mM
Tris HCl pH 9.5, 100 mM NaCl, 50 mM MgCl₂. Positive
clones were plaque purified and transfected into Y1089
(59). DNA was then prepared from the lysogen (13).
Subcloning was done in the EcoRI site of plasmid vector
pUC8 in E. coli JM83 (58). Subclones of E. coli JM83 were
tested with monoclonal antibody 13C4 as described above
with the following modifications: a dry nitrocellulose
filter was applied onto the plate and 2ml of a 2mg/l
polymyxin B solution in PBS were added on top of the
filter. The plate was then incubated at 37°C for 45
minutes before starting PBS-milk incubation. Subclone
pHS7201 in E. coli JM83, containing the B subunit of
SLT1, was identified.
Subclone pHS7201 of E. coli JM83 was found to have a
stronger signal in colony immunoblot assay in the
presence of 13C4 monoclonal antibody than parental strain
SC500 due to the gene dosage effect. A restriction map of
the Shiga-toxin coding region within pHS7201 was
identical to that of SLT1 (14). The A subunit gene was
seen to possess a unique Hpa1 site located 310 bp
downstream from the ATG starting codon where a cassette
could be inserted as described in Example 2.
In subclone pHS7201, the entire Shiga-toxin operon
is contained in a 4.2kb EcoRI DNA fragment. In vitro
mutagenesis of the A subunit gene was done by inserting
the interposon Ω(37) which codes for spectinomycin
resistance and is flanked on each side by T4 translation
transcription stop-signals. Ω was purified as an HindIII
2kb fragment, and its ends were filled in by the Klenow
fragment of DNA polymerase I. Ω was then ligated to HpaI
linearized pHS7201 to generate the recombinant plasmid
pHS7202 as shown in the Figure. The 6.2kb EcoRI fragment
containing the mutagenized sequence was then purified and
ligated with the EcoRI site of the suicide plasmid vector
pJM703.1 (51) to generate recombinant plasmid pHS7203 as
shown in the Figure. pJM703.1 replicates only if its
deficient R6K origin is complemented in-trans by the pir
function contained in the lambda phage integrated in the
genome of E. coli SM10 (21). This strain also contains
the transfer genes of the broad host range IncP-type
plasmid RP4 integrated in its chromosome. pJM703.1 can
thus be mobilized by SM10 λ pir (21) because it contains
the Mob site from RP4 (51). pHS7203 was thus stably
maintained in strain SM10 λ pir and was then conjugally
transferred into wild type S. dysenteriae 1 strain
SC500. Matings were performed on cellophane membranes,
selection was obtained by plating on M9 minimal medium
supplemented with thiamine, methionine, tryptophan and
nicotinic acid at a concentration of 10 µg/ml each, 0.2%
glucose and 50 µg/ml spectinomycin. Colonies growing on
selective medium were purified and identified as S.
dysenteriae 1 by agglutination with a specific rabbit
antiserum (Diagnostics Pasteur).
Allelic exchange between the wild-type chromosomal
Shiga-toxin gene and the in vitro mutagenized gene of
Shiga-toxin was shown by colony blot immunoassay, using
the monoclonal antibody 13C4 to detect S. dysenteriae 1
cells expressing a Tox⁻ phenotype.
The presence of the Tox⁻ modification in the genomes
of the S. dysenteriae 1 cells was verified with a probe
made from the 655 bp HindIII-HincII fragment containing
part of the A subunit gene and the entire B subunit gene
from the 4.2 kb EcoRI fragment, described above,
containing the entire Shiga-toxin operon. The 2 kb
HindIII fragment, described above, containing the Ω
interposon, was also used as a probe (37). The DNA
fragments, used as the probes, were labeled by nick-
translation (39) with ³²p-labeled 5′-dCTP (Amersham).
Total DNA was prepared from two Tox⁻ clones and analyzed
by hybridization with the Shiga-toxin probe and the Ω
probe. The DNA fragments were transferred from agarose
gels to nitrocellulose filters (Schleicher and Schüll) by
the method of Southern (53). Hybridization was carried
out at 65°C overnight, and washing was done at 65°C in
6xSSC. The probes showed that the 4.2 kb EcoRI fragment
from S. dysenteriae 1 containing the toxin genes had been
replaced in the Tox⁻ mutants by the 6.2 kb fragment,
which hybridized with both probes. This result showed
that the flanking regions on each side of the mutagenized
toxin gene in pHS7203 had recombined with their
counterparts in the SC500 genome, thus replacing the
wild-type A subunit gene by the mutated gene.
One of these Tox⁻ clones, SC501, was selected for
further study, and clone SC501 was deposited with the
Centre Nationale de Cultures de Microorganismes of
Institut Pasteur, Paris, France, under accession no.
I-774, on June 30, 1988.
SC500 and SC501, as well as their non-invasive
derivatives SC502 and SC503 respectively (obtained by the
spontaneous-cure (i.e., loss) of their large virulence
plasmid pHS7200 which is necessary for invasion of
cells), were grown for 48 hours in 200 ml of iron-
depleted medium. Glassware was pretreated with 6N HCl and
rinsed extensively with iron free H₂O. The medium
contained M9 salts supplemented with 15 µg/ml CaCl₂,
5mg/ml casamino-acids, 2mg/ml glucose, 50 µg/ml thiamine,
20 µg/ml L-tryptophane, 10 µg/ml nicotinic acid and 150
µg/ml human transferrin (Sigma). The bacteria were washed
twice in saline and resuspended in 3 ml of PBS. Lysozyme
was added at a final concentration of 0.2 mg/ml. After a
30 minute-incubation at room temperature (25°C), 30 µl
EDTA 0.5 M pH8 was added, and the cells were transferred
to an ice bath and sonicated. Sonic extracts were
filter-sterilized and kept frozen at -20°C. Filter
sterilized culture supernatants and bacterial extracts
were assayed for cytotoxicity on HeLa cells grown in
minimal essential medium with Earle's salts and N-
glutamine (Gibco, Paisley, Scotland, UK) supplemented
with 10% foetal calf serum. (Gibco) Serial dilutions were
made in cell culture medium (100 µl) in a microtitier
plate. Each well was inoculated with 2 x 10⁴ cells in 100
µl. Plates were then incubated at 37°C in 5% CO₂ for 24
hours. Neutralization assays were performed both with a
rabbit polyclonal serum and the 13C4 monoclonal antibody.
Plates were examined under light phase microscopy, then
stained with Giemsa. Cytotoxicity was calculated as the
cytotoxic dose 50% (CD50) per mg of protein of the
extract.
Multiplication of bacteria within HeLa cells was
assayed (46). Non-confluent monolayers of HeLa cells in
35 mm plastic tissue culture dishes (Becton Dickinson
Labware, Oxnard, CA, USA) were inoculated with bacteria,
resuspended in 2 ml of minimum essential medium ("MEM",
Gibco) at a multiple of infection ("MDI") of 100,
centrifuged for 10 minutes at 2,200 x g and incubated for
30 minutes at 37°C to allow entry. Plates were then
washed three times with Earle's Balanced Salt Solution
("EBBS", Gibco) and covered with 2 ml of MEM with
gentamicin (25 µg/ml). This was defined as time 0 (To).
After one hour of incubation at 37°C, preparations were
washed again, with EBSS and covered with 2 ml of MEM
without antibiotic (T1). Incubation was continued for
three more hours (T1-T4). Two plates were removed every
hour. One plate was washed three times with EBSS and
Giemsa stained to calculate the percentage of infected
HeLa cells. The other was washed five times with EBSS to
eliminate viable extracellular bacteria. Cells were
trypsinized, counted and lysed at 0.5% sodium
deoxycholate in distilled water. Dilutions were plated
onto Trypticase Soy Agar. The average number of bacteria
per infected HeLa cell was calculated. Experiments were
repeated four times. Intracellular growth curves were
drawn and the slope at exponentional phase was
calculated.
Assay for macrophage detachment and killing was
performed (4) using J774 macrophages (52) maintained in
RPMI 1640 (Flow Laboratories Inc., McLean, VA, USA)
supplemented with complement-inactivated foetal calf
serum (Gibco) and 2 mM glutamine (Gibco). Eighteen hours
before infection, 7 x 10⁵ macrophages in 35 mm plastic
tissue culture dishes (Becton Dickinson Labware) were
labeled in a culture medium containing 0.5 µCi of [³H]
uridine per ml (Amersham). Cells were washed three times
with EBSS before addition of 1 ml of the bacterial
suspension in RPMI 1640 at a MOI of 100. Infection was
performed for one hour at 37°C in 5% CO₂. Monolayers were
then washed three times with EBSS (To) and covered for
one hour at 37°C in 5% CO₂ with 2 ml of RPMI supplemented
with 2 mM glutamine and gentamicin 25 µg/ml (T1). Plates
were then washed three times with EBSS and incubated in
5% CO₂ for 3 more hours (T1-T4) at 37°C in RPMI glucose
without gentamicin. Two plates were removed every hour,
cultures were washed three times with EBSS and the
percentage of non viable macrophages among cells that
still adhered to the plastic surface was determined by
trypan blue staining. The percentage of residual
macrophages was then determined by measuring the amount
of radioactivity remaining in the dish. Adherent cells
were lysed with 1 ml of 0.5% sodium deoxycholate in
distilled water and 100 µl of this lysate was
precipitated and counted (4).
Rabbit ligated ileal loops of 10 cm were prepared in
rabbits of ca. 2 kg which were anesthesized with 0.5
ml/kg of 6% sodium pentobarbital. Inocula of 10⁷ and 10⁹
CFU in 1 ml of Trypticase Soy Broth were tested. Rabbits
were sacrificed 18 hours later. Fluid accumulation within
loops was recorded, and the volume-to-length ration
("V/L") was calculated. Portions of infected loops were
fixed in 10% buffered formalin. Specimens were processed
by standard procedures and stained with hematoxylin
eosin-safranin.
Eight rhesus monkeys weighing 3.5 to 4.5 kg were
injected intramascularly with 50 mg of ketamine
chlorhydrate (Imalgene 500, Rhône Mérieux, Lyon, France).
Each animal was inoculated intragastrically with 1.5 x
10¹¹ of SC500 and SC501 microorganisms resuspended in 20
ml of Trypticase Soy Broth and 14 g/l sodium bicarbonate
(50/50). Plating of the inoculum on Congo-red agar
indicated that less than 1% of the bacteria in the
inoculum had lost their invasive property (26). Stools
were examined daily for diarrhea, presence of pus, mucus
and blood. Intensity of each of these symptoms was graded
from 0 to 3+ every day. For each animal, the severity of
a given symptom was expressed as an index which
represented a sum of the accumulated "+" for each
symptom. Immediate autopsy was performed in monkeys who
died of fulminant dysentery. Species ware processed as
described above for rabbit tissues.
SM10 λ pir (pHS7203) was noncytotoxic in the
cytotoxicity assay. After conjugative transfer of pHS7203
into S. dysenteriae, clones that displayed the AmpS SpcR
phenotype were tested in the colony immunoblot assay.
Five per cent displayed a Tox⁻ phenotype. SC501 showed a
cytotoxicity of 347 CD50/mg of protein, which was the
same order of magnitude as that of well-known E. coli K12
(412 CD50/mg). Residual cytotoxicity from SC501 could not
be neutralized by an anti-Shiga-toxin polyclonal serum.
The presence of the Tox⁻ mutation in strain SC501
did not significantly alter its capacity to grow
intracellularly within HeLa cells since its rate of
exponential growth, expressed in generations/hour, was
2.6 ±0.7 compared to 2.5 ± 0.6 for wild-type strain
SC500. In addition, no significant difference could be
observed in the efficiency of rapid killing of J774
macrophages by SC500 and SC501. Both cell detachment and
appearance of Trypan Blue positive cells progressed at
similar rates over four hours, thus indicating that
Shiga-toxin released within infected cells neither
significantly affected the rate of intracellular growth
nor increased rapid killing of host cells.
The effect of the Inv⁻ and Tox⁻ mutations on the
pathogenicity of S. dysenteriae 1 in the rabbit ligated
loop model was determined by the effect on fluid
production within loops. Mean and standard deviations
were computed from the results obtained in six loops for
each strain at either of the two inocula (i.e., 10⁹ and
10⁷ CFU). For invasive strains (i.e. SC500, Inv⁺, Tox⁺
and SC501, Inv⁺, Tox⁻) at both inocula, the lack of
Shiga-toxin production decreased fluid accumulation, but
the difference was not statistically significant,
indicating that invasion and subsequent inflammation are
primarily responsible for fluid accumulation. For non-
invasive strains (i.e., SC503, Tox⁺ and SC502, Tox⁻) a
striking difference was observed since only the strain
producing Shiga-toxin elicited fluid accumulation. This
indicated that, in the rabbit model, Shiga-toxin is the
only enterotoxin of S. dysenteriae 1, whatever the role
this enterotoxin may play in the course of the disease.
Histopathological studies showed severe lesions including
abscesses and ulcerations destroying numerous villi at
both inocula either with SC500 or SC501. In general,
lesions were more severe in loops infected with the
wild-type strain, but the observation that the difference
was minor indicated that invasion was the major factor of
pathogenecity.
Loops infected with SC502, the non-invasive Tox⁺
strain, were severely alterated with swelling and
shortening of the villi, oedema and inflammation of the
lamina propria, alterations of epithelial cells with
large amounts of mucus shed from goblet cells and areas
of killed enterocytes with pycnotic nuclei. However, the
most striking feature was hemorrhages throughout the
epithelial layer.
The effect of the Tox⁻ mutation on the pathogenicity
of S. dysenteriae 1 was shown in monkeys. Two animals
died of fulminant dysentery at day 4 in both the group
injected with SC500 and the group injected with SC501,
each group thus indicating that Shiga-toxin was not
required for lethal dysentery. No significant
differences could be observed in the volume of diarrheic
stools and the amount of pus and mucus, although the
latter were difficult to quantify with precision. On the
other hand, the presence of blood was a constant
characteristic of abnormal stools in animals infected
with SC500 whereas only one animal infected with SC501
showed transcient presence of a slight amount of blood.
Autopsies performed immediately after the death of the
animals showed obvious differences in the colonic
peritoneal mesothelium which was particularly apparent on
the surface of the sigmoïd on which patchy hemorrhagic
areas could be observed only in the case of animals
infected with SC500. On the average, the number and
severity of abscesses was similar, but purulent necrosis
of the mucosa with destruction in Lieberkühn glands was
only observed, in some areas, in animals infected with
SC500. Inflammatory infiltration of the chorion,
submucosal tissues and peritoneum was also more severe in
these animals. In addition, the inflammatory infiltrate
of the peritoneal mesothelium which was characteristic
of animals infected with SC500 as compared to SC501, was
predominantly perivascular thus confirming the gross
examination which suggested the presence of a severe
peritoneal vasculitis. However, the most striking
difference was observed at the level of the capillary
circulation within the interglandular chorion. Monkeys
infected with SC500 showed hemorrhages dirupting the
structure of the upper part of the mucosa. Erythrocytes
could be observed being released into the intestinal
luman through microabscesses which caused local
interruption of the epithelial lining. These hemorrhages
were obviously due to destruction of the capillary loops.
On the other hand, monkeys infected with SC501 showed
dilatation of the capillary loop but no disruption. White
blood cell counts performed before and at day 3 after
infection showed: at day 0, no significant difference in
polymorpho nuclear cell ("PMN") counts, and myelemia was
absent; and at day 3, the drop in blood PMN and the level
of myelemia were much more pronounced in monkeys infected
by SC500.
Circumstantial evidence in humans supports the
hypothesis that Shiga-toxin is a true virulence factor.
Volunteers fed strain 725, an invasive, low-toxin
producing, chlorate-resistant mutant of S. dysenteriae 1,
showed less severe symptoms than those fed the wild-type
strain M131 (25). Patients experiencing natural infection
usually develop more severe symptoms including HUS when
infected with S. dysenteriae 1 than with other Shigella
serotypes (7). They rapidly develop toxin-neutralizing
antibodies (18).
The Tox⁻ mutant of S. dysenteriae 1, SC501, has been
shown to produce a residual amount of cytotoxin similar
to E. coli K12. This mutant has been used to study the
role of this Shiga-toxin in the virulence of S.
dysenteriae 1. Cellular assays and more definitive animal
models have been used.
Assays using HeLa cells and J774 macrophages in
monolayers have shown that secretion of Shiga-toxin did
not affect the rate of exponential growth within infected
cells as suggested for SLT in S. flexneri in a previous
study (46). These results were in agreement with the
observation that two other low toxin producer mutants
(25, 48) as well as the SC501 mutant do not affect
keratoconjuctivitis (49) which is known to correlate with
the capacity of bacteria to multiply within an epithelium
(35). As also suggested previously (4, 12), no
correlation could be observed between Shiga-toxin
production and early killing of host cells. Although such
data need confirmation in assays that would more closely
mimic the actual infection, they certainly indicate that
Shiga-toxin does not play a major role at the
intracellular stage of infection. Invasion appears to
trigger early metabolic events which mediate killing of
host cells (47) more rapidly than the slow acting process
of Shiga-toxin (12).
Infection of rabbit ligated intestinal loops
demonstrated only slight differences in the severity of
mucosal lesions after 18 hours with both the SC500 and SC
501 inocula. However, the duration of exposure and
closing of loops may mask the effect of cytotoxin
production and make invasion the primary event. Results
concerning enterotoxicity were more difficult to analyze
in the case of invasive bacteria since the amount of
fluid produced, although lower at both inocula for the
Tox⁻ mutant, was not significantly different from that
elicited by the wild-type strain. This indicated that
invasion of tissues is sufficient to block the
reabsorbative functions of the epithelium. On the other
hand, the striking difference observed between non-
invasive Tox⁺ and Tox⁻ mutants indicates that, within the
limits of sensitivity of the rabbit model, Shiga-toxin is
the only enterotoxin of S. dysenteriae 1. This is in
agreement with previous studies (16, 17, 33). However,
when observing fluid production by Inv⁺ and Inv⁻ mutants,
the nature of the fluid produced varies according to the
infecting strain. Invasive strains elicit production of a
viscous, mucopurulent, sometimes bloody liquid which
probably reflects the extent of abscesses ulcerated
within the lumen regardless of the amount of Shiga-
toxin produced, whereas non-invasive, Tox⁺ strains
produce a watery, sometimes bloody, liquid which is more
a reflection of enterotoxicity and cytotoxicity.
Histopathological studies of tissue samples from loops
infected with SC502, the Inv⁻, Tox⁺ mutant, showed an
important inflammatory infiltrate of the lamina propria
and major alterations predominantly at the tip of
shortened villi. This confirmed the cytotoxicity of
Shiga-toxin on enterocytes in vivo (27). However, the
most striking feature was infiltration of the epithelial
lining by erythrocytes which were shed into the lumen
along with important amounts of mucus. This observation,
which suggested that major vascular alterations had
occurred within the lamina propria, was subsequently
confirmed in the monkey model.
Intragastric inoculation of SC500 and SC501 in
macaque monkeys demonstrated that lethal fulminant
dysentery could occur regardless of Shiga-toxin
production. No significant difference was observed in the
amount of diarrhea, pus and mucus in stolls. Absence of
watery diarrhea and equal amount of stool were not
consistent with previous studies suggesting increased
jejunal secretion bu Shiga-toxin (41). The only striking
difference was the presence of blood in dysenteric stools
of animals infected with the wild type strain. A recent
paper reported that, among patients presenting
shigellosis, those who eliminated strains of higher
cytotoxicity were more likely to present blood in their
stools (36). Histopathological observations confirmed the
presence of vascular damages which appeared particularly
characteristic in the sigmoïd since monkeys infected with
the wild type strain showed total destruction of the
capillary loops within the chorion whereas the vascular
system of animals infected with the Tox⁻ mutant showed
turgescent but mostly intact vessels. This certainly
explains the presence of bloody stools in the former
group. In addition, observation of the peritoneal
mesothelium showed oedema and severe inflammatory
vasculitis. Thus, release of Shiga-toxin by invading
bacteria within the tissues may locally enhance severity
of the mucosal lesion by evoking local ischemia through
destruction of the chorion blood flow and alterations of
the peritoneal as well as possibly mesenteric
circulation. This effect appears to be local or loco-
regional since observation of kidney tissues did not show
evidence of capillary vasculitis at this stage of the
disease (data not shown). Such vascular alterations may
be consistent with observations in hemorrhagic colitis
due to E. Coli 0157:H7 (40) in which a radiologic aspect
of ischemic colitis has been described (34). These
strains produce high levels of SLT1 (31) which has a
direct cytopathic effect on dividing endothelial cells
(15)
Another difference observed between animals infected
with Tox⁺ and Tox⁻ strains was the severity of mucosal
inflammation and subsequent abscesses. In many areas of
the sigmoïd and transverse colons, lesions appeared of
similar intensity, but only animals infected with SC500
showed areas with impressive purulent destruction of
mucosal tissues.
Higher intensity of the purulent exsudate was
reflected in a more dramatic drop of blood PMN with
consecutive myelemia at day three of infection. It is
believed that, in addition to the marrow and vascular
compartments, a third PMN compartment is opened at the
colonic level during shigellosis. Shiga-toxin is expected
to increase the number of PMN entrapped within this new
compartment through vascular alterations which increase
diapedesis as well as direct release of PMN within
mucosal tissues. This would account for the rapid and
severe granulocytopenia observed in animals infected by
the wild type strain and for subsequent higher myelemia
which may be an equivalent of the leukemoïd reaction
sometimes observed in the course of severe shigellosis.
Such a model does not postulate a systemic effect of
Shiga-toxin.
The foregoing results thus suggest that Shiga-toxin
plays a limited role when released intracellularly within
epithelial and phagocytic cells. However, Shiga-toxin
released within infected tissues appears to act
predominantly through intestinal vascular damage.
Using the procedure of Example 2, SC501 is
genetically engineered by in vitro mutagenesis of its
operon coding for enterochelin. The suicide plasmid
vector pJM703.1, that is utilized, contains the
enterochelin operon of S. dysenteriae 1, with each of its
ent F, Fep E, Fep C and Fep D subunit genes mutagenized
with an interposon which codes for resistance to the
herbicide Biolafos and a suitable promoter for the
herbicide resistance gene. The resulting clone, SC504, is
Tox⁻ and enterochelin⁻ ("Ent⁻").
Using the procedure of Example 2, SC504 is
genetically engineered by in vitro mutagenesis of its ics
A gene. The suicide plasmid vector pJM703.1, that is
used, contains the ics A gene of S. flexneri, which has
been mutagenized with an interposon. The resulting clone,
SC505, is Tox⁻, Ent⁻ and ics A⁻ and can be used in making
a vaccine against S. dysenteriae 1.
Using the procedure of Example 2, a wild-type S.
flexneri is genetically engineered by in vitro
mutagenesis of its gene coding for aerobactin and its ics
A gene. The suicide plasmid vector, that is used,
contains the aerobactin and ics A genes of S. flexneri
which have each been mutagenized with an interposon. The
resulting clone SC506 is aerobactin⁻ and ics A⁻ and can
be used in making a vaccine against S. flexneri.
It is believed that this invention and many of its
attendant advantages will be understood from its
description above, and it will be apparent that various
modifications can be made in the method and vaccine
described above without departing from the spirit and
scope of the invention or sacrificing all of its material
advantages, the embodiments described above being merely
preferred embodiments.
The references, referred to above, are as follows.
Strains, plasmids, phages and their relevant characteristics | ||||
Strain | Species | Genotype | Plasmid/phage | Relevant characteristics |
SC 500 | S. dysenteriae l | thi,nad,trp,met | pHS7200 | Invasion of HeLa cells |
SC 501 | S. dysenteriae l | thi,nad,trp,met,tox,spc r | pHS7200 | Invasion of HeLa cells |
SC 502 | S. dysentariae l | thi,nad,trp,met | - | - |
SC 503 | S. dysenteriae l | thi,nad,trp,met,tox,spc r | - | - |
Y 1089 | E. coli | ΔlacU169 proA⁺ Δlon araD139 strA hfl A150[chr::Tnl0] | pMC9 | Apr, pBR322-lac iq |
λGT11 | lac5Δ (shindIIIλ2-3) srIλ3° cI857 srIλ4° nin5 srIλ5° sam100 | |||
Y 1090 | E. coli | ΔlacU169 proA⁺ Δlon araD139 strA supF[trpC22::Tnl0] | pMC9 | Apr, pBR322-lac iq |
JM 83 | E. coli | F⁻, araΔlac-pro strA thi, phi80dlacZ ΔM15 | pUC8 | Apr, cloning vehicle |
pHS7201 | Apr, Shiga toxin genes subcloned in pUC8 | |||
pHS7202 | Apr Spcr Ω is inserted at the HpaI site of pHS6001 | |||
pHP45 | Apr Spcr contains the Ω element | |||
SM10λpir | E. coli | recA, RP4-2 TC::Mu Kmr thi, thr, leu, suIII | λpir | contains the pir function from R6K replication origin |
pJM703-1 | Suicide cloning vector Apr, can be mobilized in SM10λpir | |||
pHS7203 | Mutagenized toxin genes cloned in pJM703-1 Apr Spr | |||
HB101 | E. coli | RB⁻, MB⁻, recA, supE44 (au2)lacY, leuB6 proA2 thi-1 Sm r | - | - |
Claims (13)
1. A method for modifying a wild strain of an entero
invasive Shigella to produce a modified strain of
Shigella that can be used for making a vaccine against
the wild strain of Shigella characterized by the step of
transforming the genome of the wild strain of Shigella so
that it cannot substantially invade cells of a host and
cannot spread substantially within infected cells and
from infected to uninfected cells of the host and cannot
produce toxins which will kill substantial numbers of the
host's infected, as well as uninfected, cells.
2. The method of claim 1 in which the genome of the wild
strain of Shigella is modified so that a first gene,
coding for a protein necessary for the wild strain of
Shigella to invade cells of the host, and a second gene,
coding for a protein necessary for the wild strain of
Shigella to spread within infected cells and between
infected and uninfected cells of the host, are
substantialy removed or inactivated.
3. The method of claim 2 in which the Shigella is an S.
flexneri and the first gene codes for the production or
use of aerobactin by the S. flexneri.
4. The method of claim 3 in which the second gene codes
for intra-intercellular spread.
5. The method of claim 2 in which the Shigella is an S.
dysenteriae 1, the genome of which is modified so that a
third gene, coding for the production or use of Shiga-
toxin by the S. dysenteriae 1, is substantially removed
or inactivated.
6. The method of claim 5 in which the first gene of the
S. dysenteriae 1 codes for the production or use of
enterochelin by the S. dysenteriae 1.
7. The method of claim 6 in which the second gene codes
for intra-intercellular spread.
8. The method of claim 6 in which the first gene
comprises the ent F, Fep E, Fep C and Fep D subunit genes
of the enterochelin operon of the S. dysenteriae 1.
9. The method of anyone of claims 5-8 in which the first,
second and third genes are mutagenized.
10. The method of anyone of claims 2-9 in which one or
more of the genes are inactivated by allelic exchange
with one or more in vitro mutagenized genes.
11. A Shigella which has been modified by the method of
anyone of claims 1-10.
12. A vaccine which has been made from the modified
Shigella of claim 11.
13. A Shigella which is Shiga-toxin⁻.
Priority Applications (19)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
AR89314384A AR242989A1 (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1989-07-12 | A method for modifying a wild strain of a "shigella", in order to produce a modified strain suitable for preparing a vaccine against the wild strain, and a "shigella" strain thus modified. |
AT89402024T ATE106941T1 (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1989-07-13 | TRANSFORMED SHIGELLA. |
EP89402024A EP0351322B1 (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1989-07-13 | Transformed Shigella |
DE68915876T DE68915876T2 (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1989-07-13 | Transformed Shigella. |
ES89402024T ES2054058T3 (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1989-07-13 | SHIGELLA TRANSFORMED. |
PT91177A PT91177B (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1989-07-14 | METHOD TO MODIFY THE GENOME OF A WILD STYLE OF SHIGELLA |
JP50775289A JP3608742B2 (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1989-07-14 | Transformed Shigella |
AU38795/89A AU620630B2 (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1989-07-14 | Transformed shigella |
ZA895371A ZA895371B (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1989-07-14 | Transformed shigella |
KR1019900700567A KR900702025A (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1989-07-14 | Transformed Shigella |
CA000605773A CA1324970C (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1989-07-14 | Transformed shigella |
PCT/EP1989/000831 WO1990000604A1 (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1989-07-14 | Transformed shigella |
DK65790A DK175464B1 (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1990-03-13 | Transformed Shigella |
OA59749A OA09440A (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1990-03-14 | "Transformed shigella". |
US08/118,100 US5762941A (en) | 1988-07-15 | 1993-09-08 | Modified shigella having reduced pathogenicity |
US10/814,589 US7138126B2 (en) | 1988-07-15 | 2004-04-01 | Transformed Shigella |
JP2004244704A JP2005013234A (en) | 1988-07-15 | 2004-08-25 | Transformed shigella |
JP2006149288A JP4277957B2 (en) | 1988-07-15 | 2006-05-30 | Transformed Shigella |
US11/491,115 US7439053B2 (en) | 1988-07-15 | 2006-07-24 | Transformed Shigella |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
EP0350555A1 true EP0350555A1 (en) | 1990-01-17 |
Family
ID=
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