Publication | Open Access
Serum immune response to Shigella protein antigens in rhesus monkeys and humans infected with Shigella spp
231
Citations
25
References
1986
Year
Shigella SppPathogen DetectionSerum Immune ResponseImmunologySerum Antibody ResponseSerologic TestingInfection ControlSerotype 5Shigella ProteinAntimicrobial ResistanceHealth SciencesShigella FlexneriPathogen CharacterizationAntibody ScreeningClinical MicrobiologyVaccinationZoonotic DiseasePathogenesisMicrobiologyMedicine
The serum antibody response to proteins encoded by the virulence-associated plasmid of Shigella flexneri was determined in monkeys challenged with virulent S. flexneri serotype 2a. With water-extractable antigen in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, a significant increase in antibody titer against proteins from a plasmid-carrying, virulent strain of S. flexneri serotype 5 could be demonstrated in convalescent sera. There were minimal antibody titers against proteins from an avirulent (plasmid-free) organism. Previously identified plasmid-coded polypeptides a, b, c, and d were predominant antigens recognized by a majority of the convalescent sera in immunoblots. An additional 140-megadalton plasmid-coded polypeptide was also recognized by half of the sera. Convalescent serum from an infected monkey recognized antigens on the bacterial surface in several different plasmid-containing Shigella species and in an enteroinvasive Escherichia coli strain. A survey of sera obtained from children 5 to 10 years of age who had been infected with S. flexneri or S. sonnei revealed high enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay titers in both acute and convalescent sera against a water extract from a virulent Shigella strain. In contrast, children under 3 years of age had no antibody titer in either acute or convalescent sera against the virulence-associated shigella proteins, while 3- to 4-year-old children mounted an immune response against these proteins only in convalescence.
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