Hereditary hemochromatosis restores the virulence of plague vaccine strains

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Abstract

Nonpigmented Yersinia pestis (pgm) strains are defective in scavenging host iron and have been used in live-attenuated vaccines to combat plague epidemics. Recently, a Y. pestis pgm strain was isolated from a researcher with hereditary hemochromatosis who died from laboratory-acquired plague. We used hemojuvelin-knockout (Hjv-/-) mice to examine whether iron-storage disease restores the virulence defects of nonpigmented Y. pestis. Unlike wild-type mice, Hjv-/- mice developed lethal plague when challenged with Y. pestis pgm strains. Immunization of Hjv-/- mice with a subunit vaccine that blocks Y. pestis type III secretion generated protection against plague. Thus, individuals with hereditary hemochromatosis may be protected with subunit vaccines but should not be exposed to live-attenuated plague vaccines. © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved.

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Quenee, L. E., Hermanas, T. M., Ciletti, N., Louvel, H., Miller, N. C., Elli, D., … Schneewind, O. (2012). Hereditary hemochromatosis restores the virulence of plague vaccine strains. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 206(7), 1050–1058. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jis433

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