Title: Bio 54 Schistosomes: Immunology and Host Response
1Bio 54 Schistosomes Immunology and Host Response
- Pammi Suri, Ph.D.
- Pammi_Suri_at_Brown.edu
2Role of immune response in disease and pathology
of schistosomes
- Cercarial Dermatitis (Swimmer's itch)
- Hepatosplenomegaly
- Esophageal varices
- increased portal blood pressure
- esophageal varix rupture is leading cause of
death - Reduced childhood growth and nutritional status
3Chronic Schistosomiasis
4Immunopathology
- Katayama fever (acute) immune complex disease?
- Neurological disease due to ectopic egg
deposition - End organ Pathology from granulomatous
inflammation and fibrosis induced by parasite
eggs trapped in host tissues - Hepatic or Urinary bladder fibrosis and bleeding
- Periportal fibrosis (clay pipe stem) does not
bridge adjacent triads
5Pipestem Liver Fibrosis
Consequences
- Obstruction of blood flow
- Portal hypertension
- Enlargement of collateral vessels (Abdominal,
Esophageal) - Hepatosplenomegaly
Cross-section of liver from an S. mansoni
infected human
6Role of Immune Response in Egg Induced Pathology
- Immune response is acutely manifested by large
macrophage dominated granulomas with lymphatic
infiltrates - T-cell mediated delayed type hypersensitivity
reaction (DTH) - not seen in SCID mice
- requires tumor necrosis factor TNF
- TNF restores granuloma in SCID mice
7The Schistosome Granuloma
- Eosinophils
- Macrophages
- T cells
- B cells
- Neutrophils
- Plasma Cells
- Mast Cells
- Fibroblasts
8Diagnostic assays (Prevalance and Intensity of
infection)
- greatest prevalence and intensity in children and
young adults - greater pathology in older individuals
- Detected by Kato Katz smears, ultrasonography,
and eggs in urine - Diagnostic antibody based assays
- Soluble Egg Antigen (SEA)
- Gut associated proteoglycans referred to as
Circulating Cathodic Antigens (CCA) and
Circulating anodic antigens (CAA)
9Diagnostic assays
- an antibody based diagnostic test developed for
S. mansoni and S. haematobium infections - single serum dip stick test with four
indicators - a positive reference, a negative reference and
two cloned shistosome antigens one for S. mansoni
and one forS. haematobium - detection rate of 80 with 95 specificity noted
in field studies in Egypt - These antigens have positive correlation with
worm burden as determined by egg count - disappear completly within 3 months after
treatment - relationship between periportal fibrosis, bladder
morbidity and these antigens is also noted
10Control Strategies
- CHEMOTHERAPY cure Infection by Chemotherapy
- advantage highly effective
- drugs such as PRAZIQUANTEL or OXAMNIQUINE are
highly effective against adult worms, often
requiring only a single dose for complete cure - problems cost, logistics, resistance,
reinfection - reinfection is common, especially in areas of
high endemicity - drug resistance resistant shistosme strains are
emerging - VECTOR CONTROL (Snail Control)
- advantageinterruption of transmission using
molluscicides - problems cost, logistics, environmental
11Control Strategies
- IMPROVED SANITATION
- advantage most preferable, would also impact
other diseases - problems cost, logistics, developing countries
often do not have the resources to provide
sanitary facilities to all their citizens - PROPHYLACTIC VACCINE for vaccinating potential
hosts - under development
- despite a concerted effort, no vaccine is
currently available - candidate vaccine (GST) entering Phase I clinical
trials
12General considerations
- Worms and eggs are large they cannot be
phagocytized intact - Worms do not replicate within the host (unlike
bacteria, viruses, protists) - Sterilizing immunity not needed partial immunity
would reduce disease and transmission - The "window of opportunity" worms are
susceptible to immune attack in the skin and
lungs, adult worms are refractory
13Rationale for a Vaccine
- Existing control methods need help
- Preventing infection would be more effective than
curing it - Likely to be more cost effective, easier than
sanitation and snail control - Sterile immunity is not required - a 60
reduction in average worm burden would have a
major impact on disease and transmission - Can protective immunity be induced?
14Experimental Vaccines
- attenuated cercaria
- pro works well
- con logistical, expense, ethical issues
- parasite extracts
- pro authentic antigens
- con expense, quantity
- recombinant molecules
- pro unlimited quantity
- con may not contain proper epitopes
(glycosylation)
15Experimental vaccines contd.
- naked DNA
- pro authentic antigens
- Induces both arms of immune system
- con feasibility of delivery, issues
- anti-pathology (e.g. IL-12 plus egg antigens)
- pro prevents/reduces disease
- con does not prevent infection/transmission
1610 weeks (prechallenge)
8 weeks (postchallenge)
individual samples
ELISA
pooled samples
Western Blot
17 Acquired Resistance
- Criteria for Immunity
- Role for specific components of immune system
humoral and / or cellular or both - Concomitant immunity
- "Early worm gets the bird"
- Stimulation of immune response by adult worms
that confers protection against subsequent
infection without any effect on the established
infection - Supporting Studies
- constant worm burdens in persons living in
endemic areas measured by (eggs/gm) of stool
18Concomitant Immunity
- transfer of adult worms into experimental animals
results in resistance to subsequent infection,
but transferred worms are unaffected - Resistance is positivel correlated with number of
worm pairs transferred and the interval of time
between transfer and challenge - ablation of neutrophils or eosinophills with Abs
suppresses the expression of concomitant immunity - expression of concomitant immunity is dependent
on intact thymus during primary infection - mice deficient in macrophage function fail to
demonstrate immunity despite normal granuloma
formation
19Why Concomitant Immunity?
- keeps host alive with a "manageable" infection,
can serve as an "egg factory" for an extended
period - Evidence for induction of protective immunity in
laboratory hosts and its expression in infected
human populations - laboratory rodents and infected humans display
immune mediated resistance to reinfection
20 IMMUNITY IN EXPERIMENTAL MODELS
- Immunity in the rat (a non permissive model)
- humoral (Th2) via ADCC
- evidence
- serum immunity may be transferred passively
- protective vs. non protective strains
- in vivo depletion of IgE prevents development of
immunity - maternal transfer of immunity
- immunity is adaptive and Ag specific
21Immunity in mice (permissive host)
- Single immunization with irradiated cercaria
- cell mediated (Th1) via IFN-g activated
macrophages - Evidence for protective cell-mediated responses
- macrophages from immunized mice can kill
schistosomula in vitro - antibodies to IFN-g but not IL-4, ablate
vaccine-induced immunity - IL-12 can augment vaccine-induced immunity
- immunity partially dependent on nitrous oxide
(NO) - passive transfer with serum fails to protect
- Multiple immunization with irradiated cercaria
- Ab mediated immunity
- Passive transfer with Ab protects
- BCG and IL-12 as adjuvants confer protection in
this model alsoby enhancing antibody responses
22Immune response in egg induced pathology
- not a "neat" Th1 (DTH) response, has Th2
component - egg produces factors that induce IL-10
- granulomas are downregulated over time (5-10
patients fail to do so, unknown why? - granulomas become down modulated in size and in
collagen content as infection becomes chronic
(12-15 wks) in mouse model, - down modulation is preceded by switch from Th1 to
Th2 - granulomas may protect host from hepatotoxins
produced by the egg
23Alternate model for immunity in mice/ resistance
is non-immunological
- parabiotic partners of infected mice
- No immunity develops in single sex infections
- egg deposition is an absolute requirement
- ablation of eosinophills and IgE with anti IL-4
and anti IL-5 Abs has no effect on resistance - magnitude of resistance positively correlated
with tissue egg burden, of worm pairs and of
egg granulomas in the lung - mechanistic interpretation
- granulomas from chronic infection result in
compression of portal triads with subsequent
portal hypertension- enlargement of portal-caval
anastomoses - upon secondary infection, larval parasites are
unable to lodge in the enlarged portal
mesenteries parasites are swept with blood flow
and carried to the lungs, too large to negotiate
the pulmonary capillary bed and die.
24Correlates of Immunity/children more susceptible
- In children acquired resistance still undeveloped
- blocking antibodies of the IgM and IgG2 isotypes
may explain slow development of immunity in
children - decline in prevalence and intensity with age
- acquired immunity or reduced exposure?
- Hypotheses to explain age-related resistance
- immunity develops progressively during childhood
reaching maximum around age of puberty - recently debated issue, hormonal changes at
puberty have been recently suggested to play a
role in reduced susceptibility to infection see
ref. Fulford et al, Parasitology Today, vol 14
Feb 1998)
25Correlates of Immunity (humoral Immunity)
- Antibody dependent cell mediated cytotoxicity
(ADCC) - Infected individuals have high levels of IgE and
eosinophilia - In rats, protective antibodies are of IgE, IgG2a
isotypes - blocking antibodies (IgM, IgG2) isolated from
sera of patients directly block
eosinophiil-dependent killing of schistosomula - IgG4 blocks effector functions of IgE
significant correlation between Ig4 and
susceptibility to reinfection in humans - In animal models, IgG2c was shown to inhibit the
capacity of IgG2a Ab to induce eosinophiil-depende
nt killing of schistosomula - A putative resistance gene is associated with
chromosome region containing Th2 associated genes
- Clinical expression of immunity results from a
balance between effector and blocking antibodies - Immunity to reinfection after chemotherapy is
more related to the IgE-IgG4 balance than to the
absolute levels of these two isotypes
26Correlates of Immunity (Cell-mediated responses)
- In humans, primates and rats, protective immunity
to schistosomiasis is associated with Th2
responses interleukin 4 (IL-4, IL-5 production,
IgE, IgG4 and eosinophils - IL-5 production associated with lymphocyte
proliferation to specific antigens and resistance
to reinfection of a human population - Th-2 cytokine association with protective
immunity is further documented by Th-cell clones
from subjects resistant to S.mansoni are Th0/2. - In contrast murine schistosomiasis is associated
with Th1 responses IL-2, interferon-g (IFN-g)
and IL-12 - In contrast to murine model, no evidence of
significant positive association of IFN-g
production with acquired resistance in human
studies, rather a negative association has been
reported in some instances
27Conclusions
- Differences observed in different hosts (rats and
humans vesus mice) and even in same host
suggests - Complex interaction between host and parasite is
not restricted to the context of Th1and Th2 cells
and the effects of their products - successful immune response is the result of
combination and appropriate balance of cytokines
and effector cells
28Why does the vaccine work in rats, but not mice?
29Possible mechanisms of immune avoidance by worms
- adsorption of host macromolecules (e.g. ABO
antigens) - loss of parasite antigens
- tegument refractory to damage
- release of immunoregulatory mediators
- proteolytic enzymes
- lymphocyte/mast cell inhibitory factors
30Effective Control Program
- rational vaccine strategy has been defined,
protective role of IgA and mucosal vaccination
being evaluated - Ideally, a program of schistomiasis control would
incorporate the best of both approaches
(chemotherapy and vaccination), integrated with
health education and the use of molluscicides