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Clinical and Vaccine Immunology, July 2009, p. 1040-1046, Vol. 16, No. 7
1071-412X/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CVI.00090-09
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Department of Pediatrics, Saint Louis University School of Medicine,1 the Pediatric Research Institute, Cardinal Glennon Children's Medical Center, Saint Louis, Missouri 631042
Received 1 March 2009/ Returned for modification 28 March 2009/ Accepted 21 May 2009
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1:40. Immune serum did not mediate killing of two Hia-knockout strains whose hia genes were inactivated but did mediate killing of one knockout strain at a high titer after the strain was transformed with a plasmid containing the hia gene. Immune serum did not mediate killing of HMW1/HMW2-expressing NTHI strains, which do not express the Hia adhesin. However, when two representative HMW1/HMW2-expressing strains were transformed with the plasmid containing the hia gene, they expressed abundant Hia and were susceptible to killing by the immune serum. Immune serum did not mediate killing of HMW1/HMW2-expressing strains transformed with the plasmid without the hia gene. Our results demonstrate that the Hia proteins of NTHI are targets of opsonophagocytic antibodies and that shared epitopes recognized by such antibodies are present on the Hia proteins of unrelated NTHI strains. These data argue for the continued investigation of the Hia proteins as vaccine candidates for the prevention of NTHI disease. |
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Bacteria, usually in pure culture, can be isolated from middle ear exudates in approximately two-thirds of the cases of acute otitis media (16, 35). Streptococcus pneumoniae is the most common bacterial pathogen recovered in all age groups, with isolation rates commonly ranging from 35% to 40% (16, 35). Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHI) is the second-most-common bacterium recovered and accounts for 20% to 30% of the cases of acute otitis media and a larger percentage of the cases of chronic and recurrent disease (26). Interestingly, since the introduction of the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine as part of the regular childhood vaccine schedule, NTHI has become an even more common cause of acute and recurrent middle ear disease, often surpassing S. pneumoniae in the frequency of recovery from middle ear specimens (12, 26). Many different antigens have been suggested as possible NTHI vaccine candidates (1, 3, 18, 29, 30, 42). Outer membrane proteins appear to be the principal targets of bactericidal and protective antibodies (22), and as a group, they have been the major focus of vaccine development efforts. Table 1 summarizes the relevant characteristics of some of the leading vaccine candidates currently under active investigation.
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TABLE 1. Potential vaccine antigens of NTHI
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The Hia proteins are members of a large family of bacterial proteins known as autotransporters that are found in many gram-negative bacteria (24, 48). Autotransporters are typically expressed as precursor proteins with three functional domains, an N-terminal signal peptide, an internal "passenger domain," and a C-terminal translocator or beta domain (24, 27). The signal peptide directs the protein across the inner bacterial membrane, and the translocator or beta domain forms a β-barrel structure in the outer membrane through which the passenger domain is extruded to the bacterial surface (24, 27). On the bacterial surface, the passenger domain is usually cleaved, but in the case of the Hia protein, the protein remains uncleaved and cell associated, and it functions on the cell surface as an important adhesin for Hia-expressing NTHI strains (25, 48). At present, members of the autotransporter family expressed by other gram-negative bacteria are under active investigation as possible vaccine candidates (13, 28, 40).
No information is currently available concerning the functional activity of antibodies directed against the Hia proteins of NTHI. The objective of the present study was to assess the ability of antibodies directed against the Hia proteins to mediate opsonophagocytic activity. In the work described here, we demonstrated that the Hia proteins are indeed targets of opsonophagocytic antibodies, and furthermore, we demonstrated that epitopes recognized by such antibodies are also present on the Hia proteins of heterologous NTHI strains.
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and JM101 have been described previously (45, 47). The NTHI strains examined have been described in previous work from our laboratory (6, 9, 31, 43, 44). NTHI strains 3A, 5, 11, 15, 1512A, 3179B, 3248A, and 3640A were each isolated in pure culture from middle-ear fluid specimens from children with acute otitis media. Each strain was identified as H. influenzae by standard methods and was classified as nontypeable by its failure to agglutinate with a panel of typing antisera for H. influenzae types a to f (Burroughs Wellcome Co., Research Triangle Park, NC) and to show lines of precipitation with these antisera in counterimmunoelectrophoresis assays. |
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TABLE 2. Bacterial strains and plasmids
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was used for preparation of the plasmid constructs described below, and strain JM101 was used for generation of the recombinant protein. All H. influenzae organisms were stored at –70°C in skim milk within two or three subpassages of the initial clinical isolation. H. influenzae cells were grown on chocolate agar or in brain heart infusion broth supplemented with hemin and NAD, as previously described (6). Antibiotics used to select for plasmids included ampicillin (100 µg/ml) and spectinomycin (200 µg/ml). Construction of plasmids. Plasmid pGEMEX-Hia contains a 5'-truncated hia gene fused in-frame to the T7 gene 10 present in pGEMEX-2 (Promega). pGEMEX-Hia was constructed by excising a 4.0-kbp EcoRI fragment from pHMW8-6 (9) and ligating it into EcoRI-digested pGEMEX-2. This fragment encodes amino acids 200 to 1098 of the strain 11 Hia protein and includes the 3' terminus of the hia gene as well as additional downstream DNA. Plasmid pGEMEX-Hia BstEII del contains the truncated hia gene just described but with an additional 3' deletion. This latter plasmid was constructed by digesting pGEMEX-Hia with BstEII, recovering the 7.0-kbp larger fragment, and religating the free ends after the ends were blunted. Plasmid GEMEX-Hia BstEII del encodes amino acids 200 to 788 of the strain 11 Hia protein. The fidelity of the plasmid constructs was determined by selecting constructs with the expected restriction endonuclease gel profile. Plasmid pSPEC1 is an E. coli/H. influenzae shuttle vector that was a kind gift from Lauren Bakaletz and Kevin Mason of the Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital (2). Plasmid pSPEC1/Hia contains a full-length hia gene from strain 11 and was constructed by excising an 8.0-kbp BamHI-EcoRI fragment from pHMW8-4 (9) and ligating it into BamHI-EcoRI-digested pSPEC1.
Generation and purification of the GEMEX-Hia recombinant fusion protein. E. coli strain JM101 was transformed with pGEMEX-Hia BstEII del using standard methods (7). To prepare recombinant GEMEX-Hia protein, JM101/pGEMEX-Hia BstEII del was recovered from a frozen stock culture and grown overnight at 37°C on LB agar with ampicillin. Several isolated colonies from the overnight growth were used to inoculate a flask of L broth containing 50 µg of ampicillin per ml, and the cells were allowed to grow to an A600 of 0.5. IPTG (isopropyl-β-D-thiogalactopyranoside) was then added to a concentration of 1 mM, and mGP1-2, an M13 phage containing the T7 RNA polymerase gene, was added at a multiplicity of infection of 10.Two to three hours later, cells were harvested. The recombinant protein exists as inclusion bodies when generated using this method. The cell pellet recovered from the induced cell culture was lysed in a Tris-HCl-, NaCl-, and EDTA-containing solution containing lysozyme and 1% Triton X-100, and DNase and RNase were added to digest DNA and RNA, respectively. The remaining pellet was washed repeatedly with a Triton X-100 solution prior to being solubilized in 3 M guanidine. Refolding and resolubilization of recombinant protein were achieved by slowly dialyzing the solution at 4°C in decreasing concentrations of guanidine in phosphate-buffered saline. Insoluble debris was removed from the solution by centrifugation, and protein purity was assessed by examination of fractions on polyacrylamide gels.
Chinchilla immunization protocol for generation of anti-Hia antisera. Four chinchillas were immunized with the purified recombinant GEMEX-Hia protein prepared as described above. Each animal received five subcutaneous injections of 100 µg of the recombinant protein administered every 4 to 6 weeks. The first dose of the protein was mixed with Freund's complete adjuvant, and subsequent doses were mixed with incomplete Freund's. Serum antibody responses were monitored by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and Western immunoblotting (5), and immune serum from the animal with the highest level of serum antibody was used for the opsonophagocytic experiments described below. All animal experiments complied with federal and institutional guidelines and were approved by the local Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.
Generation of hybridoma cell line producing MAb 1F4. The hybridoma line producing monoclonal antibody (MAb) 1F4, a MAb that recognizes the Hia protein of prototype NTHI strain 11, was generated using techniques identical to those described previously for the generation of anti-HMW1/HMW2 MAbs (8). In the case of MAb 1F4, recombinant soluble Hia protein, prepared as described above, was used for both mouse immunization and screening of hybridoma supernatants. Determination of antibody isotypes was performed as described previously (8), and MAb IF4 was determined to be of the mouse immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) subclass. Purified MAb 1F4 used in the Western immunoblot assay was prepared by passing 100 ml of hybridoma supernatant over a protein G (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) affinity column, washing the column with buffer, and then eluting the bound MAb with 0.1 M glycine (pH 2.5). The pH of the eluted antibody solution was quickly adjusted to a neutral pH with 1 M Tris [pH 8.0], and the sample was then dialyzed against phosphate-buffered saline prior to use in the Western immunoblot assay.
Western immunoblot assay for detection of Hia protein expression. Bacteria were recovered from skim milk stocks by transfer of a loopful of thawed organisms to a chocolate agar plate and incubation for 16 h at 37°C in a 5% CO2 atmosphere. The following morning, a bacterial suspension was prepared from the overnight plate growth and adjusted to an optical density of approximately 1.0. Fifteen microliters of each bacterial suspension was solubilized in electrophoresis sample buffer, subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis on 7.5% acrylamide gels, and transferred to nitrocellulose with a Genie electrophoretic blotter (Idea Scientific Company, Corvallis, OR) for 45 min at 24 V. After the samples were transferred, the nitrocellulose sheet was blocked with a 3% gelatin solution in Tris-buffered saline and then probed with anti-Hia MAb 1F4, followed by alkaline phosphatase-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG secondary antibody. Bound antibodies were detected by incubation with a nitroblue tetrazolium-5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate solution.
Opsonophagocytic assay with NTHI strains.
The growth conditions of the bacteria, the growth and differentiation of HL-60 cells, and the opsonophagocytic assay itself were performed as described previously (43, 44), with minor modifications. The opsonophagocytic assay used in this study was performed with 5-ml capped polystyrene tubes (Sarstedt, Newton, NC) rather than with the 96-well plates described in our earlier studies. The tubes provided more-reliable and -consistent mixing of the contents in the reaction mixture than did the plates. The complement source used in this study was human serum collected from a single healthy adult rather than the guinea pig complement used in the earlier work. Complement controls were included in all assays as described previously (43, 44). Prior to use in the assay, the human serum was adsorbed to remove serum IgG by passing aliquots repeatedly over a protein-G affinity column at 4°C (32). This treatment removed >95% of the serum IgG, as determined by laser nephelometry, yet maintained functional complement activity as assessed in a standard total hemolytic complement assay. The percentage of cells killed at each serum dilution was calculated by determining the ratio of the bacterial colony count at each dilution to that of the complement control. The means and standard deviations were calculated using data from samples run in duplicate in each assay. Statistical analyses were performed using a NCSS 2000 software package (NCSS, Kaysville, UT). Opsonophagocytic titers were defined as the reciprocal of the serum or antibody dilution that resulted in the killing of
50% of the cells of the bacterial inoculum compared to the amount of growth in the complement control wells.
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FIG. 1. Schematic diagram of functional domains within the strain 11 Hia protein and location of the portion of the Hia gene encoded by the hia gene fragment inserted into pGEMEX-2. The signal peptide (SP) contains residues 0 to 49, the passenger domain, residues 50 to 1022, the beta domain, residues 1023 to 1098, the GEMEX insert, residues 200 to 788, the HiaBD1 binding domain, residues 549 to 705, and the HiaBD2 binding domain, residues 50 to 374.
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Shown in Fig. 2 is an SDS-polyacrylamide electrophoretic gel demonstrating the purified soluble rGEMEX-Hia protein expressed by the pGEMEX-Hia BstEII del construct. The major protein species has a molecular mass of approximately 118 kDa, a size slightly larger than the predicted molecular mass for the GEMEX-Hia fusion protein based upon the amino acid sequence. The reason for the larger-than-predicted size is not completely clear, but it should be noted that native full-length Hia protein also demonstrates anomalous migration in SDS-polyacrylamide electrophoretic gels. Also, as can be seen in Fig. 2, minor lower-molecular-weight degradation products are present in the preparation, but they comprise a very small percentage of the overall protein present in the preparation.
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FIG. 2. An SDS-polyacrylamide electrophoretic gel with 7.5% acrylamide demonstrating the purified rGEMEX-Hia protein used for immunization. Lane 1, molecular weight standards; lane 2, purified GEMEX-hia recombinant fusion protein.
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Opsonophagocytic killing of NTHI strain 11 and its derivatives by rGEMEX-Hia antiserum. We first examined a set of isogenic strains derived from NTHI parent strain 11 for their susceptibility to opsonophagocytic killing by the rGEMEX-Hia antiserum. Strain 11 hia::kan, whose construction was described in earlier work, is a derivative of NTHI strain 11 in which the hia gene has been inactivated with a kanamycin resistance cassette (9). Strain 11 hia::kan/pHia is a derivative of strain 11 hia::kan in which the Hia protein is expressed in trans on the pSPEC1 shuttle plasmid (2) into which the hia gene has been cloned.
Shown in Fig. 3 is a Western immunoblot assay in which the levels of expression of the Hia protein by these strains are demonstrated. As can be seen, strain 11 demonstrates detectable but relatively low levels of Hia protein expression (Fig. 3, lane 1). In contrast, strain 11 hia::kan/pHia, the derivative in which the hia gene is expressed in trans on pSPEC1 (Fig. 3, lane 2), expresses Hia protein at a level significantly greater than that of the parent strain. We could demonstrate a roughly threefold increase in the expression level of Hia in the pHia transformant compared to that in parent strain 11 when the relative protein levels of the strains were compared by densitometry. Hia protein expression was not demonstrable at all in NTHI strain 11 hia::kan, the Hia knockout strain (Fig. 3, lane 3).
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FIG. 3. Western immunoblot assay with cell sonicates of NTHI strains probed with anti-Hia MAb 1F4. Lane 1, strain 11; lane 2, strain 11 hia::kan/pHia; lane 3, strain 11 hia::kan; lane 4, strain 5; lane 5, strain 5/pSPEC1; lane 6, strain 5/pHia. Arrows indicate Hia protein bands. The numbers on the left represent molecular weight standards.
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1:320.
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FIG. 4. Opsonophagocytic killing assay. rGEMEX-Hia antiserum was assayed against NTHI strain 11, strain 11 hia::kan, and strain 11 hia::kan/pHia. Error bars indicate the standard deviations calculated for each serum dilution.
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TABLE 3. Opsonophagocytic activity of anti-Hia antiserum against a panel of Hia-expressing NTHI strains
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To further investigate the importance of the Hia protein as a target of opsonophagocytic antibodies, we also compared the susceptibility of strains 1512A and 1512A hia::kan to killing by the rGEMEX-Hia antiserum (9). In results that mirror those described for strain 11 and its isogenic Hia knockout, the rGEMEX-Hia antiserum mediated killing of strain 1512A at a titer of 1:80 but was unable to support opsonophagocytic killing of the corresponding 1512A Hia-knockout strain (Table 4).
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TABLE 4. Opsonophagocytic activity of anti-Hia antiserum against a panel of NTHI strains
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We next transformed these two HMW1/HMW2-expressing strains with either pHia, the shuttle plasmid containing the hia gene, or pSPEC1, the shuttle plasmid without an insert. The two pHia transformants expressed abundant Hia protein, and the pSPEC1 transformants expressed none. Lanes 4 to 6 of the Western immunoblot shown in Fig. 3 demonstrate Hia protein expression seen in NTHI strain 5 and its two transformants. As can be seen, the pHia transformant expressed abundant Hia protein, whereas none was seen in the pSPEC1 transformant.
We next examined the transformants for their susceptibility to killing in the opsonophagocytic assay. The rGEMEX-Hia immune serum mediated killing of both strain 5/pHia and strain 15/pHia at a titer of 1:160. In contrast, the immune serum did not support killing of either of these strains when they were transformed with pSPEC1 plasmid without an insert (Table 4).
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In previously published work, we and our collaborators sequenced the hia genes of nine different NTHI strains (9, 25, 39). The sequences of these genes and the predicted amino acid sequences of their respective Hia proteins demonstrate considerable strain-to-strain variability, as might be expected of a bacterial surface protein that interacts with the host immune system (21). This variability could be seen as a hindrance to the development of the Hia proteins as viable vaccine candidates. However, it would be premature to come to such a conclusion. The Hia proteins are known to contain highly conserved regions within their overall structures, including within the previously identified binding domains (25, 48) and within the β-domain responsible for translocation of the passenger domain to the bacterial surface (39). In addition, Yeo and coworkers have reported that other regions of the Hia protein also demonstrate significant sequence homology with sequences of the primary binding domains (48). While the β domains of the Hia proteins are likely not accessible to host antibodies, given their probable location within the bacterial outer membrane layer, the binding domains are predicted to be more accessible to antibody as are other conserved regions within the passenger domain. The results we have presented in this work confirm the existence of shared immunogenic epitopes on the Hia proteins, given the ability of the rGEMEX-Hia antiserum to kill both homologous and representative heterologous NTHI strains. It will be important in future studies to more precisely localize the specific domains of the protein that are capable of eliciting cross-reactive functional antibodies, as these domains could serve as the basis for future recombinant or peptide-based vaccines.
In the studies we have presented, we examined a relatively small set of heterologous NTHI strains, but they represent a diverse collection of isolates that were collected from children across the country. Comparisons of the predicted amino acid sequences of both the full-length Hia proteins and the regions of the individual proteins corresponding to the GEMEX insert demonstrated significant differences between our prototype protein and the proteins from the heterologous strains. Nevertheless, given the great diversity of NTHI (19, 31), in future studies it will be important to examine a much larger collection of Hia-expressing strains for their susceptibility to killing by anti-Hia immune sera. It will also be of interest to examine encapsulated H. influenzae for susceptibility to killing by anti-Hia antibodies. While the encapsulated H. influenzae species do not express an Hia protein per se, they do express the closely related protein known as Hsf (for Haemophilus surface fibrils) (15). This protein family demonstrates a binding specificity very similar to that of the Hia protein family and contains highly conserved sequences within the binding domains (15), suggesting that immunogenic surface epitopes might also be shared between members of the Hia and Hsf protein families.
The Hia proteins are expressed by only a subset of NTHI strains (9, 38). If used alone, the Hia proteins would not be particularly attractive as a vaccine component. However, as was noted earlier, almost all NTHI strains that do not express an Hia adhesin protein do express an HMW1/HMW2-like adhesion protein(s). In our earlier work, we demonstrated that antibodies directed against the HMW1/HMW2 family of proteins are also opsonophagocytic for NTHI strains that express such proteins and that these antibodies are active against both homologous and heterologous HMW1/HMW2-expressing strains (43, 44). A vaccine based upon a combination of Hia and HMW1/HMW2 proteins could potentially provide protection against infections caused by most or all NTHI strains. These data argue for the continued investigation of both the Hia and HMW1/HMW2 protein families as vaccine candidates for the prevention of NTHI disease.
Published ahead of print on 27 May 2009. ![]()
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