News and Research
Immune System
Mouse Model Mimics Real-World Plague Infection
3-25-2004
An experimental plague vaccine proved 100 percent effective
when tested in a new mouse model for plague infection developed
by scientists at Rocky Mountain Laboratories (RML), part
of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
(NIAID) of the National Institutes of Health. The scientists
developed their model to mimic the natural transmission
route of bubonic plague through the bites of infected fleas.
The flea-to-mouse model provides a more realistic test setting
than previously used methods, enabling a better assessment
of a vaccine's ability to protect against a real-world challenge.
The
new report, authored by lead researcher and RML plague expert
B. Joseph Hinnebusch, Ph.D., appears in the April edition
of Infection and Immunity, now available online. Collaborators
included Clayton O. Jarrett, M.S., and Florent Sebbane,
Ph.D., of RML in Hamilton, MT; and Jeffrey J. Adamovicz,
Ph.D., and Gerard P. Andrews, Ph.D., of the U.S. Army Medical
Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID), where
the recombinant plague vaccine tested in the model was made.
"Replicating
the natural transmission of plague from flea to host in
this model is tedious and unusual work," notes NIAID
Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D. "This creative approach,
however, brings researchers much closer to answers to real-life
questions."
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In their study, the RML scientists first infected
fleas by letting them feed on blood containing a virulent strain of
Yersinia pestis, the bacterial agent of plague. The infected fleas
then fed on 15 mice that had been inoculated with the experimental
vaccine containing an adjuvant (an immune booster). For comparison,
the researchers let infected fleas also feed on a second group of
15 mice that had received only the adjuvant.
Although all 15 vaccinated mice remained symptom-free
even after multiple feedings by the fleas, plague occurred in 14 of
the 15 mice that had received the adjuvant alone.
"This research shows that the vaccine worked
in a real-world context," Dr. Hinnebusch says. "The vaccine
had prior successes in rodents and non-human primates, but in those
experiments, the animals received laboratory-grown plague bacteria
and were artificially exposed to it by needle and syringe."
Despite these earlier successes, says Dr. Hinnebusch,
"It wasn't a given that this vaccine would work in a natural
setting." With natural flea transmission, he explains, the bacteria
exist in a special form and are deposited along with flea saliva into
the skin of the animal in a way that cannot be duplicated artificially.
During a natural infection, the digestive system of some fleas becomes
blocked with a highly infectious bacterial mass. When these "blocked"
fleas continue to feed, the host blood hits the mass, becomes tainted
with concentrated plague bacteria, and is regurgitated back into the
host.
In their experiment, the RML scientists made certain
that numerous blocked fleas--in some cases as many as 13--fed repeatedly
on the vaccinated mice to ensure that the rodents could withstand
multiple bites by infected fleas.
"It's difficult to do a natural challenge for
an arthropod-transmitted disease, particularly with plague,"
Dr. Hinnebusch says, explaining why this method is uncommon. "You
have to have flea colonies. You have to be able to infect them safely.
You need medical entomology, microbiology and biosafety expertise.
It's much easier to infect a host artificially with a needle and syringe."
Dr. Hinnebusch and his colleagues will use the natural
challenge model to test other plague vaccines in development. They
also will try to learn how plague bacteria spreads through a host
after being transmitted by a flea, with hopes of developing new treatments
to counteract the spread of plague in an infected person.
A plague vaccine available until the mid-1990s is
no longer being made, Dr. Hinnebusch says, because of its short-term
effectiveness and many side effects.
The experimental plague vaccine invented at USAMRIID
is a fusion of protective proteins referred to as F1-V. The F1-V vaccine
has been shown to protect mice, black-footed ferrets and monkeys against
injected plague. Furthermore, USAMRIID has shown the vaccine protects
both mice and monkeys against the highly lethal form of inhaled plague.
"Two factors--the threat of antibiotic-resistant
plague and the possible use of plague by bioterrorists--have the public
health system scrambling to come up with an effective vaccine and
alternative treatments," Dr. Hinnebusch says. "Plague has
been used as a bioweapon before and it could be again."
Bubonic plague killed millions of people in Europe
in the Middle Ages. The World Health Organization now reports some
2,500 new cases of plague annually, including about 180 annual deaths;
75 percent of the new cases and deaths are in Africa. The United States
experiences 10 to 15 cases annually, according to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. The most common source of infection
is bites from infected fleas carried by wild rodents.
Bubonic plague is characterized by painful, swollen
lymph nodes called buboes that are often hot to the touch. Symptoms
usually include fever, extreme exhaustion and headaches. Onset of
bubonic plague generally occurs 2 to 6 days after exposure. If untreated
in humans, the disease spreads rapidly, and the bacteria can invade
the bloodstream (leading to plague septicemia) and the lungs (leading
to pneumonic plague).
USAMRIID, located at Fort Detrick in Frederick, MD,
is the lead medical research laboratory for the U.S. Biological Defense
Research Program and plays a key role in national defense and in infectious
disease research.
NIAID is a component of the National Institutes of
Health, an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
NIAID supports basic and applied research to prevent, diagnose and
treat infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted
infections, influenza, tuberculosis, malaria and illness from potential
agents of bioterrorism. NIAID also supports research on transplantation
and immune-related illnesses, including autoimmune disorders, asthma
and allergies.
Reference: C Jarrett et al. Flea-borne transmission
model to evaluate vaccine efficacy against naturally acquired bubonic
plague. Infection and Immunity 72:2052-56 (2004). DOI: 10.1128/IAI.72.4.2052-2056.2004.
Press releases, fact sheets and other NIAID-related
materials are available on the NIAID Web site at www.niaid.nih.gov.
This article has been adapted from a news release
issued by NIH/National Institute Of Allergy And Infectious Diseases,
www.niaid.nih.gov.
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