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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, March 2005, p. 387-398, Vol. 12, No. 3
1071-412X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CDLI.12.3.387-398.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Intercell AG, Campus Vienna Biocenter 6, Vienna, Austria,1 Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology,2 Department of Orthopedic Surgery, University of Pécs, Pécs, Hungary3
Received 4 November 2004/ Returned for modification 14 December 2004/ Accepted 3 January 2005
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Staphylococci are primarily extracellular pathogens; consequently, host defense relies mainly on innate immunological mechanisms supported by antistaphylococcal adaptive humoral responses. This notion is well supported by the increased frequency of staphylococcal infections among individuals deficient in antibodies (hypo- and agammaglobulinemias) and neutrophil function (30). In spite of the ability of the organism to produce a large number of toxins and extracellular products, the hallmarks of S. aureus infections are dissemination through the blood and multiplication that can be most efficiently controlled by phagocytosis. Thus, complement-mediated opsonization is essential for the elimination of S. aureus by the human host (9). Although it has been shown that serum immunoglobulin (Ig) preparations can neutralize toxins from S. aureus in in vitro assays (10, 18), further studies are needed to determine the importance and involvement of circulating human antibodies in protection.
Previously, several studies have investigated the human immune response to S. aureus in infected patients but only a few have investigated the response in apparently healthy individuals. In most of the serological studies, antibody levels against total bacterial lysates or few selected proteins were determined and increased levels were measured in convalescing patients (4, 7, 8, 48). Further evidence for the role of antibodies in protection comes from experimental studies conducted with animals. It has been shown that antibodies against certain bacterial components of S. aureus, such as surface adhesins (ClfA, FnBp, and collagen binding protein) (16, 21, 23, 44), lipoproteins (Pbp2a) (49), surface polysaccharides (types 5 and 8), and poly-N-succinyl beta-1-6 glucosamine (PNSG) (15, 27, 35), as well as secreted toxins (22, 26, 37) are of benefit in defense against staphylococcal infection. This is in accordance with the data from a clinical study performed using a type 5 and a type 8 polysaccharide conjugate vaccine that caused a decreased prevalence of bacteremia in hemodialysis patients (50).
As antibodies have been shown to contribute to protection against staphylococcal disease, it is reasonable to speculate that susceptibility to disease correlates with the levels of antistaphylococcal antibodies. While infected patients would be expected to display low levels of antibodies in the acute phase of the disease, healthy individuals may possess protective antibodies dependent on previous encounters with the pathogen.
In this study we therefore aimed at analyzing antibody responses against multiple S. aureus antigens of healthy individuals and acute-phase patients with documented staphylococcal infection. The comparison of antibody levels and responses might thus identify "missing" antibodies that contribute to disease susceptibility or "early antigens" that induce antibody responses at disease onset. In addition, we evaluated the relationship between levels and functionality of antibodies in vitro.
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30 years) and 89 children (from 0 to 18 years old). We performed serial sampling (two to four samples from 13 donors) from the adult donor group for studies of the stability of antibody levels and nasal carriage; thus, a total of 100 serum samples were analyzed. A total of 42 samples were obtained from patients with documented S. aureus infections such as wound infection (17 subjects), bacteremia and sepsis (15 subjects), and other diseases such as pneumonia, arthritis, urinary tract infection, catheter-related infections, and peritonitis (10 subjects) within 2 to 8 days after disease onset. The patients were between 25 and 92 years of age, with the majority (23 out of 44) above 70 years of age. Sera with serial sampling (acute, early, and late convalescent phases) were collected from patients suffering from orthopedic prosthetic device-related infections. The serum samples used for the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) were stored at 4°C with 0.02% sodium azide as preservative; those used for functional assays were stored at 80°C without preservative. ELISA. ELISA was performed according to standard protocols (using a 50-µl volume in each step except for blocking [100 µl]). Briefly, 96-well plates (Maxisorp; NUNC, Roskilde, Denmark) were coated with antigens (50 µl) diluted in 0.1 M NaHCO3 buffer (pH 9.3) to a concentration of 10 µg/ml for total lysate and culture supernatant proteins prepared from a S. aureus spa (protein A-deficient) strain or 2 to 5 µg/ml for recombinant proteins. The plates were incubated overnight at 4°C. Peptide ELISA was performed with biotin-labeled peptides and coated on streptavidin ELISA plates (EXIQON, Vedbaek, Denmark) at 10 µg/ml, according to the manufacturer's instructions. After blocking of nonspecific sites with 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA)-phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), human sera were added at various dilutions. The optimal dilutions of sera were 200-, 1,000-, and 5,000-fold for recombinant proteins and peptides and 5,000- to 50,000-fold for total lysate, supernatant proteins, lipoteichoic acid (LTA), and peptidoglycan (PG). The plates were incubated for 1.5 h at 37°C. After washing with PBS-0.1% Tween 20 (PBS-T), horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-human antibodies (Southern Biotechnology Associates, Birmingham, Ala.) were added to each well at a 1,000-fold dilution and plates were incubated for 1 h at 37°C. After the last washing step with PBS-0.1% Tween 20, incubation with the substrate 2,2'-azinobis(3-ethylbenzthiazolinesulfonic acid) (ABTS) was performed for 30 min at 37°C, and titers were measured at 405 nm on a Sunrise ELISA reader (Tecan, Maennedorf, Switzerland). All serum samples were analyzed in duplicate, and mean values were calculated. Internal positive- and negative-control sera were included on each plate. The results were expressed as ELISA units calculated from optical density (OD) readings, serum dilutions in the linear range of response, and total IgG and IgA concentrations of individual serum samples.
Avidity measurements were performed by including Na-isothiocyanate (in 1, 2, 3, or 4 M final concentrations) during the incubation of the antigens with serum samples in the 1,000- to 25,000x dilution range according to the method of Romero-Steiner et al. (46).
Serum IgG and IgA concentrations were determined by ELISA. Affinity-purified goat anti-human IgG or anti-human IgA capture antibodies (Bethyl Laboratories, Montgomery, Tex.) were used at a 10 µg/ml concentration for coating 96-well plates (Maxisorp; NUNC). Serial dilutions of sera (1:10,000 to 1:600,000) were made in PBS-BSA, and human reference serum (Bethyl Laboratories) (in the range of 7.8 to 1,000 ng/ml) was used as a standard. Highly specific horseradish peroxidase-labeled goat anti-human IgG or anti-human IgA secondary antibodies (Bethyl Laboratories) were used as detecting reagents according to the recommendations of the manufacturers (dilution,
1:50,000).
Staphylococcal antigens. Total bacterial lysate was prepared using the lysostaphin digestion method. Briefly, S. aureus was cultivated overnight at 37°C with 150-rpm shaking in brain heart infusion (BHI) medium. Approximately 1010 bacteria were harvested and washed with PBS. The pellet was resuspended in 200 µl of PBS buffer containing protease inhibitor cocktail Complete EDTA-free tablets (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany) and 20 µg of lysostaphin (Sigma-Aldrich, Steinheim, Germany). After enzymatic digestion at 37°C for 30 min, the cells were disrupted by sonication using a microsonicator (Sonoplus HD 2200; Bandelin Electronics, Berlin, Germany) and the soluble fractions were recovered by centrifugation. Culture supernatant fraction was prepared by ethanol precipitation. Briefly, culture supernatants of overnight S. aureus cultures grown in BHI medium were incubated with 3 volumes of ice-cold ethanol at 20°C for at least 12 h and precipitated proteins were collected by centrifugation. The pellet was dried and resuspended in PBS. Protein concentrations were determined by the Bradford method (protein assay; Bio-Rad, Munich, Germany).
The staphylococcal recombinant proteins were expressed as fusion proteins with a StrepII tag (IBA, Göttingen, Germany), six-His tag, or glutathione S-transferase (GST) tag. All genes were cloned using genomic DNA from the S. aureus COL strain. DNA was amplified by gene-specific oligonucleotides with incorporated BsaI and SalI sites for StrepII- and GST-tagged proteins (IsdB and StbA), respectively. Restriction enzyme-digested PCR products were cloned into BsaI-cleaved pASK-IBA4 vector (IBA) or into SalI-cleaved pGEX-4T vector. The recombinant genes encoding the gram-positive signal peptides (according to the SignalP prediction program) and C-terminal sequences downstream from the sortase cleavage site (LPXT
G) (where "X" represents any amino acid) were removed. Sequences corresponding to SD repeats (serine, aspartic acid) of ClfB and the Sdr proteins were also omitted. ClfA was produced as an N-terminal six-His-tagged protein, and the corresponding DNA was amplified from pCF4, a multicopy plasmid carrying a clfA gene from the S. aureus Newman strain (a gift from Tim Foster, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland) (33), by gene-specific oligonucleotides with incorporated XhoI/NdeI sites and cloned into the pFS23 vector. The recombinant proteins were purified from bacterial extracts of Escherichia coli BL21 induced by anhydrotetracyclin (pASK-IBA4) or IPTG (isopropyl-
-D-thiogalactopyranoside) (pGEX-4T) by affinity chromatography with StrepTactin Sepharose (IBA), glutathione-Sepharose (Amersham Biosciences, Uppsala, Sweden) or Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid agarose (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany) (according to the manufacturer's instructions).
LTA and PG were purified from S. aureus and purchased from Sigma-Aldrich.
Peptides were synthesized in small scale by use of standard F-moc chemistry on a Rink amide resin (PepChem, Tübingen, Germany) by the use of a SyroII synthesizer (Multisyntech, Witten, Germany). After the sequence was assembled, peptides were elongated with Fmoc-epsilon-aminohexanoic acid and biotin (Sigma-Aldrich). Peptides were cleaved off the resin with 93% TFA-5% triethylsilane-2% water for 1 h, dried under vacuum, and freeze-dried three times using acetonitrile-water (1:1). The presence of the correct mass was verified by mass spectrometry on a Reflex III matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight (Bruker, Bremen, Germany).
In vitro opsonophagocytosis assay. S. aureus Wood strain cells were labeled with the fluorescent dye Alexa 488 (Molecular Probes, Leiden, The Netherlands), and following preopsonization with 10% human serum for 15 min at 37°C, 2% complement (guinea pig serum; Institute for Immunology, Johannes Gutenberg-University, Mainz, Germany) and 2 x 106 macrophages of the cell line P388.D1 were added to 2 x 107 S. aureus cells and incubation was continued for 15 min at 37°C. The phagocytic cells were washed three times to remove loosely attached bacteria before fixation with 2% paraformaldehyde. Opsonization was monitored as an increase in mean fluorescence intensity of the phagocytic cells measured with a fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) (BD Biosciences, Bedford, Mass.).
In vitro bactericidal assay. Phagocytic cells and bacteria were incubated in the presence of complement to measure antibody-dependent killing on the basis of the loss of viable bacteria as determined by colony counting. In brief, S. aureus 8325-4 cells were washed twice in Hanks balanced salt solution and the cell density was adjusted to 105 CFU in 50 µl of Hanks balanced salt solution. Bacteria were incubated with human serum IgGs (0.25 to 4 µg) and guinea pig complement (up to 5%) in a total volume of 100 µl for 60 min at 4°C. Preopsonized bacteria were mixed with macrophages (murine cell line RAW264.7; 2 x 106 cells per 100 µl) at a 1:20 ratio and were incubated at 37°C on a rotating shaker at 500 rpm. An aliquot of each sample was diluted in sterile water and incubated for 5 min at room temperature to lyse macrophages. Triplicates were then plated onto BHI agar plates, and colonies were counted with a Countermat flash colony counter (IUL Instruments, Königswinter, Germany).
Toxin neutralization assay. During the assay setup it was established that 250 ng of recombinant S. aureus alpha-toxin (Toxin Technology, Sarasota, Fla.) resulted in about 90% hemolysis of rabbit red blood cells as quantitated by measuring released hemoglobin. To compare the characteristics of neutralizing activity of human sera, individual samples in the 20- to 320-fold dilution range were preincubated with 250 ng of alpha-toxin before being added to rabbit blood (30-fold diluted with PBS) for 30 min at 37°C. Hyperimmune anti-alpha-toxin rabbit serum was used in the assay as a positive control, and toxin-neutralizing activity expressed as a percentage of inhibition of hemolysis-hemoglobin release was quantified by spectophotometric measurements at 545 nm and expressed as a percentage of lysis (100% lysis was achieved by incubation of rabbit red blood cells in distilled water).
Western blotting. Proteins were separated by one-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) with a mini-Protean electrophoresis system (Bio-Rad, Austria) and transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane (ECL; Amersham Biosciences, Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom) by a semidry transfer system (Bio-Rad, Vienna, Austria). After overnight blocking in 5% milk, human sera at 1:10,000 dilutions were added, and horseradish peroxidase-labeled goat anti-human IgGs (Southern Biotechnology Associates) were used for specific detection of immune complexes. The signal was developed using an ECL detection system (Amersham Biosciences, Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom).
Purification of IgGs. Highly enriched preparations of IgGs were generated by protein G affinity chromatography according to the manufacturer's instructions (UltraLink immobilized protein G; Pierce, Rockford, Ill.). Antibody concentrations were measured at an OD of 280 nm (OD280) and were also estimated by SDS-PAGE analysis (using BSA as a standard).
Statistical analysis. An unpaired Student's t test was used to compare ELISA values between two groups. Differences were considered significant when the P value was equal to or less than 0.05.
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FIG. 1. Antistaphylococcal IgG and IgA antibody levels show great variability in healthy individuals. Antibody levels were determined by ELISA using total bacterial lysate (upper panel) or culture supernatant (lower panel) from S. aureus 8325-4 (spa) (grown in BHI overnight) as a coating antigen and serum samples from 54 healthy adults. Antigen-antibody interactions were detected with highly specific anti-human IgG and IgA antibodies. Results are shown as OD405 values for serum dilutions in the linear range (1:50,000 for lysate and 1:10,000 for culture supernatant).
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FIG. 2. Kinetics of induction of antistaphylococcal antibodies during childhood. IgM, IgA, and IgG antibodies were detected by ELISA using total bacterial lysates prepared from S. aureus 8325-4 (spa) as a coating antigen and serum samples from 89 healthy children in different age groups. Results are shown as OD405 values for serum dilution in the linear range (1:10,000 for IgG and 1:200 for IgA and IgM). For each of the eight different age categories, 9 to 16 sera were analyzed for antibody levels.
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FIG. 3. The majority of antistaphylococcal IgG antibodies are induced by lipoteichoic acid and peptidoglycan. (A) Correlation between serum antibody levels against LTA (upper panel) or PG (lower panel) and total S. aureus 8325-4 (spa) lysate. Sera from 40 healthy donors were diluted 10,000-fold for LTA and bacterial lysate measurements and 5,000-fold for PG. Results are shown as OD405 values. (B) Determination of the contribution of LTA to total antistaphylococcal reactivity with competition ELISA using soluble LTA as a competitor at the indicated amounts and total S. aureus lysate as a coating antigen. (C) IgG and IgA anti-LTA and anti-PG antibody levels were determined in standard ELISAs using five different human serum samples from healthy adults determined to have high total antistaphylococcal antibody titers.
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TABLE 1. Recombinant S. aureus proteins used in the studya
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FIG. 4. Comparison of IgG and IgA antibody levels against staphylococcal surface proteins. (A) Purified recombinant proteins were visualized by Coomassie blue staining of SDS-12% PAGE to assess integrity and purity. Proteins are indicated by common names; predicted molecular weight values are shown in parentheses. All proteins except Stbp and IsdB (GST negative) were expressed with a six-His tag. (B) IgG and IgA antibody levels in sera from healthy and infected individuals were determined by ELISA with recombinant proteins. Antibody reactivity was expressed in ELISA units calculated from OD readings obtained from measurements with 1,000-fold serum dilutions. Representative examples of antigens showing higher, equal, or lower IgG (upper panel) and IgA (lower panel) antibody levels in healthy donors (open circle) relative to infected donors (filled circle) are shown. Median values are shown for both groups, and statistically significant differences are indicated by asterisks.
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TABLE 2. IgG and IgA antibody levels measured using recombinant staphylococcal proteinsa
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FIG. 5. Tendency for higher IgG and lower IgA levels in S. aureus nasal carriers. IgG and IgA levels for total S. aureus 8325-4 (spa) bacterial lysates were measured by ELISA and individual data points are shown for noncarriers (open circle) (n = 17), transient carriers (gray-shaded circle) (n = 13), and permanent carriers (filled circle) (n = 9). Median values are indicated for all groups.
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FIG. 6. Biotin-labeled peptides (e.g., SA0858.3) representing selected epitopes were used as coating antigens in ELISAs to measure specific IgG levels from human sera. Lanes P1 to P10, sera from infected patients; lanes H1 to H10, sera from healthy individuals. Black panels represent high reactivity; dark grey panels represent intermediate reactivity; grey panels represent low reactivity; light grey panels represent very low reactivity. Each score was calculated from the number of positive serum results and the extent of reactivity. SA0095, IgG binding protein A (Spa); SA0164, gramicidin S synthetase 2-related protein; SA0177, glucokinase regulator-related protein; SA0178, PTS system, IIBC components; SA0193, maltose ABC transporter, maltose binding protein; SA0316, conserved hypothetical protein; SA0470, exotoxin; SA0507, LysM domain protein; SA0632, membrane protein; SA0723, LysM domain protein; SA0858, secretory extracellular matrix and plasma binding protein (Empbp); SA1062, bifunctional autolysin; SA1472, cell wall-associated fibronectin binding protein (Ebh); SA1489, recombinant protein U; SA1791, FtsK/SpoIIIE family protein; SA2006, aerolysin/leukocidin family protein; SA2019, sdrH protein, putative; SA2291, staphyloxanthin biosynthesis protein; SA2236, ribosomal protein L2; SA2418, IgG binding protein SBI; SA2505, cell wall surface anchor family protein (LPXTG); SA2581, staphyloxanthin biosynthesis protein.
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FIG. 7. Novel peptide epitopes identified with high-titer staphylococcal sera induce antibodies in infected patients during convalescence. A total of 14 biotin-labeled peptides representing epitopes with high antibody reactivities with sera from healthy adults were used as capture antigens on streptavidin-coated ELISA plates. Two serum samples were taken from patients with osteomyelitis in the acute phase (open bar) and of the convalescent phase (filled bar) and used to measure IgG antibodies induced during disease. Patients P60 and P63 had acute osteomyelitis, while patient P66 suffered from chronic infection. Serum samples were taken 3 to 4 weeks apart.
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FIG. 8. Stable levels of circulating antistaphylococcal serum antibodies in healthy individuals. Serial serum samples were taken from eight healthy adults (patients H1 to H8) at different time points (as indicated) and analyzed by ELISA for antigen-specific IgG antibody levels by the use of four different recombinant proteins. Results are expressed as ELISA units calculated from OD readings at 1,000-fold serum dilutions.
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Antistaphylococcal antibody levels correlate with functionality. We reported previously that pools of high-titer sera from healthy individuals and from infected patients were equally effective in inducing complement-dependent opsonization (14). We now investigated whether a correlation between antistaphylococcal ELISA titers and functional activity could be established. In a FACS-based in vitro opsonophagocytosis assay using fluorescently labeled S. aureus, we compared several human serum samples characterized with low, intermediate, or high antistaphylococcal antibody levels for their activity to induce the uptake of S. aureus by cultured murine monocytic cells (p388/D1) (Fig. 9A) and freshly isolated human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (data not shown). The enhancement of opsonophagocytosis correlated well with IgG levels, but such a correlation was not observed with antistaphylococcal IgA levels.
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FIG. 9. Antistaphylococcal antibody levels correlate with functionality. (A) A FACS-based opsonophagocytosis assay was performed with fluorescently labeled S. aureus (Wood strain) and P388.D1 mouse macrophage cells in the presence of 10% human sera with different total antistaphylococcal titers. Sera were from low (HL1)-, intermediate (HM1)-, and high (HH1 and HH2)-titer sera, all from healthy (H) donors. C, control (no serum or complement added); C', only complement (no serum added); HL1, HM1, and HH1 and HH2, 10% serum added in the presence of complement. (B) Levels of bactericidal killing activity of total serum IgG preparations were determined by a plating assay. IgG (1 µg) was preincubated with S. aureus 8325-4 cells before addition to cultured mouse RAW264.7 monocytic cells in the presenceof complement. Low (HL1 and HL2)-, intermediate (PM1 and PM2)-, and high (HH2)-titer sera were from healthy donors (H) or infected patients (P). Bactericidal activity is expressed as the percentage of decrease in CFU levels relative to the results seen with control samples (no IgG). (C) Toxin neutralization activity was measured as the level of hemolysis of rabbit red blood cells by alpha-toxin from S. aureus in the presence of human sera used at 20- to 320-fold dilutions. Low (HL1 and HL2)-, intermediate (HM1 and HM2)-, and high (HH1)-titer sera were from healthy (H) donors. Toxin-neutralizing activity was expressed as a percentage of inhibition of hemolysis by alpha-toxin at different serum dilutions. Hemolysis was measured as a release of hemoglobin that was quantified by spectrophotometric measurements at 545 nm. Rabbit anti-alpha-toxin serum was used as a positive control in the assay.
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A sensitive in vitro toxin neutralization assay using recombinant alpha-toxin of S. aureus and rabbit blood was performed as a third assay to correlate antibody levels with functionality. Five selected sera from healthy donors with different levels of total antistaphylococcal antibodies were analyzed. We observed that serum samples characterized with the lowest total antistaphylococcal IgG levels displayed the lowest toxin-neutralizing activity, while a high antistaphylococcal titer correlated with efficient toxin neutralization activity (Fig. 9C).
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There are at least three different ways that S. aureus can stimulate the adaptive immune system and induce specific antibodies: (i) exposure at mucosal surfaces that does not result in colonization; (ii) colonization at mucosal surfaces (nasopharynx and intestines) and special anatomical niches (anterior nares and anorectal locations); (iii) latent or clinically apparent infections of otherwise sterile body sites (wounds, blood, bones, etc.). We addressed the issue of why individuals show a large heterogeneity of antistaphylococcal antibody levels by comparing serum from carriers and noncarriers. We learned that carriage was associated with a tendency to have higher antistaphylococcal IgG and lower serum IgA levels, as determined with total bacterial lysates. However, certain individuals who repeatedly tested negative for nasopharyngeal carriage also displayed high IgG reactivities.
The role of serum IgA antibodies in antistaphylococcal immunity is not well characterized. A previous study obtained results that are important for our observation that both secretory and serum IgAs were shown to induce opsonophagocytosis of S. aureus by polymorphonuclear leukocytes in vitro (20).
Staphylococci cause life-threatening (mainly nosocomial) infections in only a small subset of infected patients. It is generally accepted that antibodies are crucial in protecting individuals against extracellular bacteria such as S. aureus. The great heterogeneity in antistaphylococcal antibody levels in the population may thus indicate that certain individuals are immune to S. aureus and that high levels of functional antibodies make the host less susceptible to staphylococcal diseases. Several studies have indicated that intravenous IgG preparations from human plasma of healthy blood donors contain antibodies that are effective against S. aureus. The most convincing study was performed with IgG preparations obtained from human plasma samples selected on the basis of high ClfA antibody levels that showed neutralizing and opsonophagocytic function in in vitro assays and protection in animal models (53). It is interesting in that regard that our results obtained in three independent in vitro assays demonstrated that circulating antibodies in healthy individuals are functional and that activity correlates with antibody levels.
Nevertheless, as the vast majority of antibodies are induced by lipoteichoic acid, which fails to promote opsonization (42), levels as such cannot be used to predict protection. We therefore evaluated the contribution of individual antigens as well as specific antibody levels against the individual proteins to the overall antistaphylococcal antibody response in sera from acute-phase patients and healthy individuals. Sera from both donor groups recognized multiple recombinant protein components and showed, on average, levels of IgG antibodies that were higher than those of IgA antibodies. While most of the antigens showed comparable antibody levels, we found significantly higher IgG levels in sera from infected patients for six surface proteins, namely, SdrD, HarA, FnbpA, Enolase, EbpS, and SA0688, suggesting that these antigens are expressed early during disease and recognized by the patients' immune system. Most importantly, we identified three proteins, clumping factor B, extracellular fibrinogen binding protein (Efb/Fib), and coagulase, that detected significantly lower antibody levels in acute-phase patients compared to the results seen with healthy individuals, indicative of their supportive function to prevent infection in healthy individuals. Interestingly, all three proteins belong to a group of six fibrinogen binding proteins of S. aureus (2, 6, 33, 34, 36, 39, 43). Our results are further supported by data from others showing lower antibody levels for Efb in acute-phase patients with staphylococcal sepsis whereas increased levels of IgGs for ClfA were measured (7). It is interesting in this context that Efb has been reported to inhibit complement activation that can contribute to the ability of S. aureus to evade or inactivate host immune responses (28). Judging on the basis of this function, it might be that individuals with lower levels of Efb-neutralizing antibodies are more susceptible to systemic infections caused by S. aureus.
According to clinical data, staphylococcal antibody responses evoked by disease do not seem to be protective in the long term, since many individuals encounter multiple staphylococcal infections. It has also been reported that increased antibody levels measured in convalescent patients are only transient and decrease within months postinfection (8). It was therefore surprising to detect stable levels of antibodies against staphylococcal proteins in healthy adults irrespective of their carriage status. The heterogeneity of antibody levels already established among children suggests that early exposure to S. aureus might influence subsequent immune responses and thus determine antistaphylococcal antibody levels in adulthood. Stably high levels of circulating serum antibodies (with 21 and 8 days half-life for IgG and IgA, respectively) are the result of continuous production by plasma cells. There are several mechanisms that can be implicated in the maintenance of serological memory (1) against S. aureus: the role of long-lived plasma cells and continuous antigen boosting (due to the commensal nature of this pathogens) as well as ongoing polyclonal (non-antigen-specific) activation of memory B cells already induced in childhood as the result of early interaction with S. aureus.
The immune response induced by permanent nasal carriage seems to be ineffective at prevention of systemic disease; it is common to suffer from invasive staphylococcal disease that is caused by the resident strain (41). Interestingly enough, our comparative analyses of protein-specific antibody levels revealed levels of IgG and IgA antibodies for ClfB, HarA, and Map-w in sera of nasopharyngeal carriers significantly lower than in sera of noncarriers. This observation is in agreement with our finding for acute-phase patients, who also showed significantly lower anti-ClfB IgG and IgA antibody levels, supporting the notion that high ClfB antibody levels may contribute to prevention of infection. It is noteworthy in this context that ClfB has been shown to promote adherence to epidermal cytokeratins in vitro and has been suggested to be a major determinant in S. aureus nasal colonization (38). Moreover, Map proteins have been known to possess immunomodulatory activity mediated by molecular mimicry with major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC II) molecules and as a result to interfere with the interaction of activated T cells and MHC-II-expressing antigen-presenting cells. In vivo data with map-positive and map-negative S. aureus strains suggest that Map protein plays a role in persistent staphylococcal infections (29). Judging on the basis of our previous studies, HarAby binding to haptoglobin-hemoglobinseems to be important for iron acquisition. In light of these virulence functions, it is attractive to speculate that lower levels of neutralizing antibodies in permanent nasal carriers play a role in S. aureus carriage.
Nasal carriage in healthy individuals is likely to be controlled by local innate and adaptive immune functions. Although there is cross-talk between local and systemic humoral immunity, further understanding of the role of specific mucosal antibodies neutralizing the function of virulence factors necessitates the analysis of antistaphylococcal Igs in nasopharyngeal secretions.
The antibodies induced by S. aureus and present in human serum constitute the molecular imprint of the in vivo expression of the corresponding antigens. Our ELISA analyses with selected staphylococcal proteins suggested that the antistaphylococcal antibody repertoires from healthy and diseased individuals overlap. Similarly, a proteomic analysis showed that sera from healthy donors and infected patients recognize a similar pattern of antigens from S. aureus (47). These data prompted us to identify staphylococcal antigens by the use of antibodies from high-titer sera from healthy people in a comprehensive genomic screening method (14). Besides proteins known to be immunogenic and/or involved in the virulence of S. aureus, a number of novel proteins were discovered by this method. Analyses of antibody levels against defined epitopes within these S. aureus antigens showed comparable immune reactivities with sera from healthy adults and infected patients, suggesting an overlapping pattern of expression of the corresponding antigens during invasive disease and during colonization and interaction without infection.
It is presently mysterious why antibodies against distinct proteins, such as the fibrinogen binding proteins, are underrepresented in infected patients and carriers. Yet it was recently reported that the S. aureus protein A, a superantigen that interacts with B-cell receptors, is capable of initiating a sequence of events by the rapid down-regulation of B-cell receptors and coreceptors which ultimately causes apoptosis of B cells. The lack or low level of antibodies reactive with certain antigens may therefore be caused by the presence of superantigens, such as protein A, which can potentially cause the elimination of distinct B cells that are concomitantly induced (19, 51).
The data presented in this study strongly indicate that larger studies that included carrier and noncarrier as well as patient donor groups would be of importance for the understanding of staphylococcal disease and its prevention. In addition, the detailed analysis of sera obtained from serial sampling before and during staphylococcal disease could provide further evidence for the importance of missing or underrepresented antibodies against distinct staphylococcal components for disease susceptibility and vaccine development.
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