L. Cardenas et al., INFLUENCE OF STRAIN VIABILITY AND ANTIGEN DOSE ON THE USE OF ATTENUATED MUTANTS OF SALMONELLA AS VACCINE CARRIERS, Vaccine, 12(9), 1994, pp. 833-840
It is now accepted that oral killed typhoid vaccines are not effective
at inducing protective anti-typhoid immunity. It is not known whether
oral killed Salmonella can function as an effective carrier of other
antigens to the immune system. In order to test this hypothesis, we im
munized groups of mice with viable and non-viable preparations of aroA
Salmonella dublin strain EL23 which codes for production of the bindi
ng subunit of the heat-labile enterotoxin of Escherichia coli (LT-B).
Animals immunized orally with viable EL23 developed serum and mucosal
anti-LT-B responses consistent with our previous findings. Significant
ly, mice immunized orally with ultraviolet-killed EL23 developed serum
and mucosal antibody responses equivalent to those which developed in
animals orally immunized with the same number of viable EL23. We exte
nded these observations to include a number of methods of killing the
organisms which may also preserve the ability of these strains to func
tion as carriers. Our findings indicate that viability is not a requir
ement for use of a Salmonella strain as an immunological carrier. More
over, our evidence indicates that bacteraemia and persistence in tissu
es are not necessary for oral priming, and therefore it may be best to
dissociate the question of what makes the best live oral anti-typhoid
vaccine from the question of what makes a good carrier of heterologou
s antigens.