Spinach makes a safer anthrax vaccine
18 April 2003 17:00 GMT
by Hillary E. Sussman
Spinach could provide an answer to
the quest for a safer, purer anthrax vaccine, suggest US researchers. The
plant could readily be used as a vehicle for the production of an edible
vaccine against the infection, say immunologists at
Thomas Jefferson University in
Philadelphia.
Efforts to develop a new vaccine have been stepped up since the current
anthrax vaccine, which was licensed for human use in 1970, was recently
deemed sub-optimal.
Anthrax is caused by the spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis,
which exists as spores in the soil and, therefore, commonly affects
grazing animals such as cattle and sheep. Human infection, although rare,
occurs following direct skin contact with infected animals or their wool,
hides or tissues, by ingestion of contaminated meat, or via inhalation of
the spores. Left untreated, inhalation anthrax is almost always fatal and
early intervention with antibiotics, such as ciprofloxacin, is essential.
Vaccination is recommended for persons at risk of exposure to anthrax
spores. The current vaccine is based on cell-free culture supernatants of
an attenuated strain of B. anthracis adsorbed on aluminium
hydroxide (in the USA) or precipitated with aluminium phosphate (in the
UK) - aluminium acts as an adjuvant. It is incompletely characterized and
difficult to standardize and, therefore, exhibits inconsistency between
lots. It is also relatively reactogenic, with side effects including a
possible link to Gulf War syndrome (whose symptoms include chronic
fatigue, depression, skin rashes and gastrointestinal disorders), and
requires a lengthy dosing schedule, all of which suggest the need for an
improved, alternative vaccine.
The main immunogenic component of the current vaccine has been
determined to be the protective antigen (PA), and vaccination with PA
alone can induce protective immunity to anthrax. PA binds mammalian cell
surface receptors, where it is proteolytically cleaved and activated to
form a heptameric pore-like structure that binds either edema factor (EF)
or lethal factor (LF) to form edema toxin and lethal toxin, respectively.
Following endocytosis of the toxin complex, PA facilitates the passage of
the toxins into the host cell cytoplasm where they disrupt normal
signaling pathways leading to cell lysis, toxic shock and, ultimately,
death. However, "if you can block the very first stage - binding of the PA
to the receptor - you block the mechanism-of-action of the toxin and
essentially block the disease," said Alexander Karasev, assistant
professor of microbiology and immunology at Thomas Jefferson University.
"The new vaccines will be based on recombinant PA and will be much
purer than the current vaccine," said Meryl Nass, a Diplomat on the
American Board of Internal
Medicine, but "whether a pure PA vaccine will be safer is a big
question."
Stephen Leppla, senior investigator in the Microbial Pathogenesis
Section at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, (NIH) concurs. "The concerns about the
existing vaccine may well apply to protective antigen-based vaccines
regardless of whether they are made in plants, bacteria, yeast or other
systems. There is no a priori reason to suggest that plant-derived
vaccines will produce fewer side effects."
Nevertheless, many scientists believe that it is unlikely that the PA
protein itself is associated with adverse reactions. Furthermore,
plant-based vaccines are appealing. "One of the beauties of the plant
system is that there are no pathogens that infect both plants and
animals," said Karasev, and without having to continuously screen the
production medium for contaminants, screening costs are significantly
reduced.
Mohammed Azhar Aziz, senior research fellow at the Centre For
Biotechnology, Jawaharlal Nehru University,
India adds that the "production of subunit vaccines in plants offers the
additional unique advantage of delivery in commonly consumed foodstuff,
which may enhance the availability and ease of delivering immunizations."
Aziz is part of a group of scientists that successfully integrated the PA
gene into the nuclear genome of tobacco plants last year.
Because there is some public opposition to the genetic modification of
plants, and tobacco is considered an experimental plant, the scientists at
Thomas Jefferson University designed a system to transiently express PA
within a normal spinach plant, moving yet another step closer to an edible
anthrax vaccine.
Specifically, a fragment of PA that represents most of the
receptor-binding domain was expressed as a translational fusion with a
capsid protein on the outer surface of tobacco mosaic virus, and spinach
was inoculated with the recombinant virus particles. "One of the
rationales for using just a fragment of the protein is that basically you
don't need the whole protein to elicit a protective immune response," said
Karasev, whose data were presented last month at the American Society for
Microbiology Biodefense Research Meeting, in Baltimore, USA.
The plant-expressed PA is highly immunogenic in laboratory animals, but
producing antibodies that are specific to PA is not sufficient. "The key
question is whether or not the antibodies are protective," remarked
Sanford Kimmel, professor of family medicine at the Medical College of
Ohio.
Karasev's group plans to first test whether these antibodies inactivate
the anthrax toxin in vitro and then determine whether they protect
laboratory animals against anthrax. Karasev also admits that evoking a
good systemic immune response after the vaccine is delivered through the
digestive system is "probably the biggest challenge today." The PA
fragment was extracted and purified from the spinach to test it as an
immunogen "but in theory if you solved the problem of eliciting a strong
immune response you can probably just eat it as a vegetable salad," said
Karasev.
The development of plant-based vaccines to protect against many other
diseases, such as HIV-1, hepatitis B, rabies and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma,
are ongoing.