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BackgroundShigellosis is the leading cause of diarrheal deaths worldwide and is particularly dangerous in children under 5 years of age in low- and middle-income countries. Additionally, the rise in antibiotic resistance has highlighted the need for an effective Shigella vaccine. Previously, we have used the Multiple Antigen-Presenting System (MAPS) technology to generate monovalent and quadrivalent Salmonella MAPS vaccines that induce functional antibodies against Salmonella components.MethodsIn this work, we detail the development of several monovalent vaccines using O-specific polysaccharides (OSPs) from four dominant serotypes, S. flexneri 2a, 3a, and 6, and S. sonnei. We tested several rhizavidin (rhavi) fusion proteins and selected a Shigella-specific protein IpaB. Quadrivalent MAPS were made with Rhavi-IpaB protein and tested in rabbits for immunogenicity.ResultsIndividual MAPS vaccines generated robust, functional antibody responses against both IpaB and the individual OSP component. Antibodies to IpaB were effective across Shigella serotypes. We also demonstrate that the OSP antibodies generated are specific to each homologous Shigella O type by performing ELISA and bactericidal assays. We combined the components of each MAPS vaccine to formulate a quadrivalent MAPS vaccine which elicited similar antibody and bactericidal responses compared to their monovalent counterparts. Finally, we show that the quadrivalent MAPS immune sera are functional against several clinical isolates of the serotypes used in the vaccine.ConclusionsThis quadrivalent MAPS Shigella vaccine is immunogenicity and warrants further study.

Original publication

DOI

10.3390/vaccines12101091

Type

Journal article

Journal

Vaccines

Publication Date

09/2024

Volume

12

Addresses

Division of Infectious Diseases, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.