Title: Immunology of carbohydrates
1Immunology of carbohydrates
2Immunology
- Different immune systems
- Cell-mediated
- T-cells
- Humoral
- Antibodies
- Role in protection
- Interaction of polysaccharides with the immune
system - Modification of polysaccharides to improve
protective response - Endotoxin - immune system
- Example of some unique bacterial polysaccharides
3IMMUNOLOGYOverview of the immune System
Immune System
Innate (Nonspecific)
Adaptive (Specific)
Cellular Components
Humoral Components
Cell-Mediated
Humoral (Ab)
4Definitions
- Immunogen
- Compound that give rise to an immune response
- Antigen (Ag)
- Compound that the elicited immunity reacts with
- Hapten
- Part of an immunogen (can not elicit immune
response itself) - Epitope or Antigenic Determinant
- Part of an antigen
- Antibody (Ab)
- Proteins produced by the immune system upon
stimulation with an immunogen
5Factors Influencing ImmunogenicityContribution
of the Immunogen
- Foreignness
- Size
- Chemical Composition
- Physical Form
- Degradability
6Factors Influencing ImmunogenicityContribution
of the Biological System
- Genetics
- Species
- Individual
- Responders vs Non-responders
- Age
7Factors Influencing ImmunogenicityMethod of
Administration
- Dose
- Route
- Subcutaneous, dermal gt Intravenous gt Intragastric
- For mucosal immunity - intranasal
- Adjuvant
- Substances that enhance an immune response to an
Ag
8Chemical Nature of Immunogens
- Proteins
- Polysaccharides
- Nucleic Acids
- Lipids
- Some glycolipids and phosopholipids can be
immunogenic for T cells and illicit a cell
mediated immune response
9Types of AntigensT-dependent
- Examples
- Microbial proteins
- Non-self or Altered-self proteins
10T-cell dependent antigens
- Proteins and peptides
- Presented to T cells by
- Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC)
- Macrophages
- B cells
- Dendritic cells
- Long lasting immune response
- Formation of memory B and T cells
- High affinity antibodies
- IgA, IgM, IgG1, IgG2a, IgG2b, IgG3
11Th cells are primed by antigen-presenting cell
B-T cell cooperation B cells receive signals from
T cells
B cells divide
B-memory cell
12T-Independent Antigens
- Activate B cells at high concentrations
- Large polymeric molecules with repeating
determinants - Poorly degraded
- Some activate both immature and mature B cells
some only mature cells - Responses dominated by CD5 B cells
13Types of Antigens T-independent
- Properties
- Polymeric structure
- Polyclonal B cell activation
- Yes -Type 1 (TI-1)
- No - Type 2 (TI-2)
- Resistance to degradation
- Examples
- Pneumococcal polysaccharide, lipopolysaccharide
- Flagella
14 15Antigenic DeterminantsRecognized by B cells and
Ab
- Composition
- Proteins, polysaccharides, nucleic acids
- Sequence (linear) determinants
- Conformational determinants
16ImmunoglobulinsStructure and Function
17Basic immunoglobulin structure
- Immunoglobulins - heterogeneous
- Myeloma proteins - homogeneous immunoglobulins
18Immunoglobulin Fragments Structure/Function
Relationships
Ag Binding
Complement Binding Site
Binding to Fc Receptors
19IgG
- Structure
- Monomer (7S)
- Properties
- Major serum Ig
- Major Ig in extravascular spaces
- Placental transfer Does not require Ag binding
- Fixes complement
- Binds to Fc receptors
- Phagocytes - opsonization
20IgM
- Structure
- Pentamer (19S)
- Properties
- 3rd highest serum Ig
- Fixes complement
- Agglutinating Ig
- Binds to Fc receptors
- B cell surface Ig
21IgA
- Structure
- Serum - monomer
- Secretions (sIgA)
- Dimer (11S)
- Secretory component
- Properties
- 2nd highest serum Ig
- Major secretory Ig (Mucosal or Local Immunity)
- Tears, saliva, gastric and pulmonary secretions
- Does not fix complement (unless aggregated)
- Binds to Fc receptors on some cells
22Antigen-Antibody ReactionsTests for Ag-Ab
reactions
23Nature of Ag/Ab Reactions
- Lock and Key Concept
- Non-covalent Bonds
- Hydrogen bonds
- Electrostatic bonds
- Van der Waal forces
- Hydrophobic bonds
- Multiple Bonds
- Reversible
24Tests Based on Ag/Ab Reactions
- All tests based on Ag/Ab reactions can be used to
detect either Ag or Ab
25Agglutination Tests
26Agglutination/Hemagglutination
- Definition - tests that have as their endpoint
the agglutination of a particulate antigen
- Qualitative agglutination test
- Ag or Ab
Bacteria, RBC, Particle with antigen
Y
Y
?
Y
27Agglutination/Hemagglutination
- Applications
- Blood typing
- Bacterial infections
- Fourfold rise in titer
- Bacterial identification
28Enzyme-Linked Immunoassay (EIA)
29Solid Phase Non-Competitive EIA
- Ab detection
- Immobilize Ag
- Incubate with sample
- Add labeled anti-Ig
- Amount of labeled Ab bound is proportional to
amount of Ab in the sample - Quantitative
30Solid Phase Non-Competitive EIA
- Ag detection
- Immobilize Ab
- Incubate with sample
- Add labeled antibody
- Amount of labeled Ab bound is proportional to the
amount of Ag in the sample - Quantitative
Labeled Ab
Y
Ag
Y
Immobilized
Solid Phase
31Immunology of bacterial polysaccharides
- Carbohydrate antigens exhibit a large degree of
antigenic variation - Between and within the same species
- Basis of serogrouping or serotyping systems
32Immunology of bacterial polysaccharides
- gt 10 different serogroups of Neisseria
meningitidis - gt 90 different serotypes of Streptococcus
pneumoniae based on the CPSs - The number of LPS O-antigens for several species
gt 100 - Anti-polysaccharide antibodies are usually,
serotype/serogroup-specific
33Diversity in the carbohydrate antigens in some
clinically important bacteria
34Immunology of bacterial polysaccharides
- T-cell independent (TI)
- Anti-polysaccharide immune response is
characterised by - Lack of immunological memory
- Isotype restriction of antibodies
- Children lt2 years of age and elderly respond
poorly to polysaccharide antigens.
35T-cell independent antigens
- Type 1
- Induce proliferation and differentiation of both
naïve and mature B cells - May induce immune responses in neonates and
adults - Example bacterial lipopolysaccharides (LPS)
- Type 2
- High molecular mass repetitive polysaccharide
structures - Poor in vivo degradability
- Activate mature B-cells
- Antigen-specific antibodies
- Poor response in neonates and elderly
- Examples CPS from S. pneumoniae, N. meningitidis
and H. influenzae
36Bacterial polysaccharides - vaccine
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Neisseria meningitidis
- Haemophilus influenzae
37Polysaccharide based vaccines
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Gram-positive
- Adults - lower respiratory tract infections
- Children - otitis media
38Streptococcus pneumoniae
- 83 different type specificities
- First vaccine - 14-valent
- 14 polysaccharides - 70-80 of all infections
39Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Today a 23-valent vaccine - 90 protection
- 23 polysaccharides - most common in US and Europe
- Distribution of the CPS-types differ
geographically
40Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Age-related differences in distribution and
immune response - Infants
- Development of polysaccharide-protein conjugate
vaccines
41Neisseria meningitidis
- Worldwide problem
- Endemic and epidemic form
- Epidemic disease in all parts of the world
- 500/100.000
42Neisseria meningitidis
- Mortality rates
- Not treated - 85
- Treated - 10
- Cured patients may suffer of permanent
neurological deficiencies
43Neisseria meningitidis
- Gram-negative
- Serological classification into groups
- A, B, C, 29e, W135, X, Y and Z
- Based on the structures of capsular
polysaccharides
44Neisseria meningitidis
- Groups A, B, C responsible for 90 of cases
- Vaccine available for groups A and C
- No vaccine against group B
45Haemophilus influenzae
- Type b H. influenzae - major cause of
meningitidis in children up to 5 years - Mortality 5-10
46Haemophilus influenzae
- Gram-negative
- Six CPS types (a-f)
- Type b the most common
47Haemophilus influenzae
- Type b PS - long-lived complement mediated
bactericidal antibodies in adults - Age-dependence
- Only children older than 18 months - protected
48Structural mimicry of polysaccharides
- E. coli K5 is identical to the first polymeric
intermediate in the biosynthesis of Heparin - E. coli K4 similar structure as chondroitin
- N. meningitidis B homopolymer of -8)aD-NeuNAc(2-
- Identical to E. coli K1 capsule
49N. meningitidis serogroup B
- Homology between carbohydrate structures on
bacterial surface and those of host cell
membranes - N. meningitidis serogroup B CPS and E. coli K1
antigen are antigenically similar to structures
expressed on human foetal neuronal cells - poor immunogens in humans
- N. meningitidis serogroup B CPS in a vaccine not
possible - potential risk of inducing antibodies against
self antigens
50How to circumvent the T-cell independent property
of polysaccharides
- Protein - polysaccharide conjugates
51Hapten-carrier conjugates
- Definition
- Structure
- native determinants
- haptenic determinants
52T Cell-B Cell Interactions(hapten-carrier effect)
- T-helper cells recognize carrier, B cells
recognize hapten - T-helper and B cells cooperate by interacting
53Mechanism of Hapten-Carrier
- Hapten recognized by Ig receptor on B cell
- Hapten-carrier endocytosed
- Carrier processed and presented on class II MHC
to T-helper cell - Activated T-helper cell produces cytokines
- Cytokines enable B cell to be activated to
produce anti-hapten antibodies
54Protein - polysaccharide conjugates
- Haemophilus influenzae b (Hib) conjugate vaccine
-
- Efficacy
- lt1 year - 99
- 1-2 years - 97
- 2-3 old children - 94.
- Reduction of carriage of Hib,
- lower transmission rates
55Protein - polysaccharide conjugates - Neisseria
meningitidis
- The type A and C neoglycoconjugate vaccines
- safe and well tolerated in infants and young
children - specific anti-A and anti-C polysaccharide
antibody titers. - Meningitidis serogroup B
- homopolymer of ?-2?8-linked sialic acid residues
- poor immunogen in man.
- The poor immunogenicity due to immunologic
tolerance induced by foetal exposure to
cross-reactive polysialated glycoproteins
expressed in a variety of host tissues, such as
neuronal cell adhesion molecules.
56Protein - PS conjugates
- Tetanus toxoid
- Diphteria toxoid
- CRM197 - mutant diphteria toxin
57How to circumvent the T-cell independent property
of polysaccharides
- Peptides mimicking polysaccharides
- Example for V. cholerae
58Peptides mimicking polysaccharides
- Brucella abortus LPS
- S. flexneri 5a LPS
- C. neoformans polysaccharide
- Meningococcol polysaccharide
- Streptococcal polysaccharide
- V. cholerae polysaccharide
- Blood-group antigen
- Tumor associated carbohydrate
- Carbohydrates on adeno-carcinoma cells
59Possible candidates for V. cholerae O139 vaccine
- Whole bacteria - killed
- Attenuated live bacteria
- CPS
- Poor immunogen
- T-cell independent immune response
- LPS
- endotoxic
60Aims
- To select peptides that mimic the capsular
polysaccharide in V. cholerae O139 -
- To evaluate the specificity and protective
efficacy of antibodies against selected peptides
that mimic the capsular polysaccharide in
V. cholerae O139
61Polysaccharide capsule
HO O
P
4 6
- ?-Colp-(12)-?-D-Galp
-
- 3
- 6)-?-D-GlcpNAc-(14)-?-D-GalpA-(13)-?-D-QuipNAc
-(1 - 4
-
- ?-Colp
62Identification of mimotops
Peptide library
63Phage display
64Suckling mouse assay
65Suckling mouse assay - dose response
66Suckling mouse assay - specificity
67Conclusions
- 8 peptides that mimic O139 CPS - selected
- Immune response in mice specific against O139 CPS
- Anti-peptide antibodies are protective in the
suckling mouse assay - Protective efficacy both specific and
dose-dependent - Peptides are possible candidates for development
of a novel, safe and efficient vaccine against V.
cholerae O139
68Conclusions
- First example that peptides mimicking a
bacterial polysaccharide possess protective
efficacy against the disease
69Advantages with polysaccharide-based vaccines
- Capsular polysaccharide
- Elicit antibodies similar to those in natural
response - Safe and efficacious
- Microbial products
- Can be easily purified
- Capsular polysaccharide-protein conjugate
- Elicit antibodies similar to those in natural
response - Convert T-cell independent to T-cell dependent
responses in infants and children - Increased immunogenicity in infants and young
children - Safe and efficacious
- Peptide mimotope of polysaccharide antigen
- Biochemically defined
- T-cell dependent antigens
- can elicit immunological memory, affinity
maturation and isotype switching
70Disadvantages with polysaccharide-based vaccines
- Capsular polysaccharide
- Poorly immunogenic T-cell independent-type 2
antigens - Do not elicit immunological memory or isotype
switching - Capsular polysaccharides are heterogeneous
- Capsular polysaccharide-protein conjugate
- Do not elicit classical T-cell dependent
responses in the elderly - Most opsonic IgG subclasses might not be produced
- Protective and non-protective antibodies can be
produced - Conjugates from CPS preparations are
heterogeneous - Possible undesired immunity against the carrier
protein - Peptide mimotope of polysaccharide antigen
- Poorly immunogenic if not conjugated to a carrier
molecule - No experience for efficacy in humans
71Lipopolysaccharide endotoxin
- 1892 - Heat inactivated lysates of Vibrio
cholerae induced pathophysiological reaction in
guinea pigs (Pfeiffer)
72- Mammals - permanent contact with Gram-negative
bacteria and LPS
73Endotoxin - Biological activity
74Lipid A
- Carbohydrate
- GlcN-?-(1?6)-GlcN
- 6-7 fatty acids (all saturated)
75Escherichia coli lipid A
76Host cells stimulated by LPS
- Monocytes/Macrophages
- Endothelial cells
- Neutrophils
- Smooth muscle cells
77Mechanism for host response against endotoxin
78(No Transcript)
79Granulocyte
Direct action Stimulation of additional
cells Recruitment of additional
mediators (complement factors, clotting cascade)
Priming for O2 release Adhesion molecules
-
Monocyte/ Macrophage
TNF-? IL-1 IL-6 PAF Oxygen radicals
Endotoxin
Fever Hypotension Tachycardia Tachypnoe Neutropeni
a DIC MOF Death
IL-1 IL-6 Adhesion molecules
Endothelial cell
80T-cell dependent polysaccharide - example
- Bacteroides fragilis
- Anaerobe
- Member of normal flora
- Gram-negative
- Outer membrane contain LPS and CPS
- Most B. fragilis strains produce two different
CPS - PS A
- PS B
- Negatively and positively charged - zwitter ions
81B. fragilis NCTC 9343 capsular polysaccharides
- Polysaccharide A (PS A)
- Polysaccharide B (PS B)
- Both contain free aminogroup and a carboxyl group
82Capsular polysaccharide as virulence factor
- Anti-CPS antibodies do not protect against
abscess formation - T cells from animals immunized with B. fragilis
protect against abscess formation - Onderdonk et al 1982
83B. fragilis capsular polysaccharide A
A
O
H
N
3
H
C
3
HO
O
NHAc
O
OH
O
HO
NHAc
O
O
O
HO
OH
O
OH
-
COO
O
O
O
CH
3
n
84B. fragilis capsular polysaccharide B
B
HO
CH
3
O
O
AcHN
OH
O
O
O
-
H
N
O
OH
3
O
P
OH
OH
O
O
-
O
COO
NHAc
O
O
H
C
3
HO
HO
OH
O
O
NHAc
OH
OH
O
CH
3
n
85Other charged bacterial polysaccharides in
abscess induction
O
OH
O
O
NHAc
O
HO
O
O
O
HO
O
OH
O
HO
NHAc
O
Streptococcus pneumoniae type 1 C-substance YES
86Other charged bacterial polysaccharides in
abscess induction
O
O
NHAc
O
OH
O
O
O
O
HO
OH
OH
Streptococcus pneumoniae type 1 capsular
polysaccharide YES
87Other charged bacterial polysaccharides in
abscess induction
OH
O
O
HO
O
O
O
HO
OH
OH
Streptococcus pneumoniae type 3 capsular
polysaccharide NO
88Other charged bacterial polysaccharides in
abscess induction
O
O
HO
NHAc
O
Salmonella typhi Vi polysaccharide NO YES if
N-deAcetylated
89Other charged bacterial polysaccharides in
abscess induction
- Both the positive and negative charge required
- Other charged polysaccharides induce
cross-protection against abscess formation - Tzianabos et al 1995