RrgB321, a fusion protein of the three variants of the pneumococcal pilus backbone RrgB, is protective In Vivo and elicits opsonic antibodies

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Abstract

Streptococcus pneumoniae pilus 1 is present in 30 to 50% of invasive disease-causing strains and is composed of three subunits: the adhesin RrgA, the major backbone subunit RrgB, and the minor ancillary protein RrgC. RrgB exists in three distinct genetic variants and, when used to immunize mice, induces an immune response specific for each variant. To generate an antigen able to protect against the infection caused by all pilus-positive S. pneumoniae strains, we engineered a fusion protein containing the three RrgB variants (RrgB321). RrgB321 elicited antibodies against proteins from organisms in the three clades and protected mice against challenge with piliated pneumococcal strains. RrgB321 antisera mediated complement-dependent opsonophagocytosis of piliated strains at levels comparable to those achieved with the PCV7 glycoconjugate vaccine. These results suggest that a vaccine composed of RrgB321 has the potential to cover 30% or more of all pneumococcal strains and support the inclusion of this fusion protein in a multicomponent vaccine against S. pneumoniae. © 2012, American Society for Microbiology.

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Harfouche, C., Filippini, S., Gianfaldoni, C., Ruggiero, P., Moschioni, M., Maccari, S., … Masignani, V. (2012). RrgB321, a fusion protein of the three variants of the pneumococcal pilus backbone RrgB, is protective In Vivo and elicits opsonic antibodies. Infection and Immunity, 80(1), 451–460. https://doi.org/10.1128/IAI.05780-11

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