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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Qualitative and quantitative assessment of meningococcal antigens to evaluate the potential strain coverage of protein-based vaccines

John Donnelly; Ducci O. Medini; Giusepp E. Boccadifuoco; Alessia Biolchi; Joel I. Ward; Carl E. Frasch; E. Richard Moxon; Maria Stella; Maurizio Comanducci; Stefania Bambini; Alessandro Muzzi; William H. Andrews; Jie Chen; George W. Santos; Laura Santini; Philip Boucher; Davide Serruto; Mariagrazia Pizza; Rino Rappuoli; Marzia Monica Giuliani

A unique multicomponent vaccine against serogroup B meningococci incorporates the novel genome-derived proteins fHbp, NHBA, and NadA that may vary in sequence and level of expression. Measuring the effectiveness of such vaccines, using the accepted correlate of protection against invasive meningococcal disease, could require performing the serum bactericidal assay (SBA) against many diverse strains for each geographic region. This approach is impractical, especially for infants, where serum volumes are very limited. To address this, we developed the meningococcal antigen typing system (MATS) by combining a unique vaccine antigen-specific ELISA, which detects qualitative and quantitative differences in antigens, with PorA genotyping information. The ELISA correlates with killing of strains by SBA and measures both immunologic cross-reactivity and quantity of the antigens NHBA, NadA, and fHbp. We found that strains exceeding a threshold value in the ELISA for any of the three vaccine antigens had ≥80% probability of being killed by immune serum in the SBA. Strains positive for two or more antigens had a 96% probability of being killed. Inclusion of multiple different antigens in the vaccine improves breadth of coverage and prevents loss of coverage if one antigen mutates or is lost. The finding that a simple and high-throughput assay correlates with bactericidal activity is a milestone in meningococcal vaccine development. This assay allows typing of large panels of strains and prediction of coverage of protein-based meningococcal vaccines. Similar assays may be used for protein-based vaccines against other bacteria.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Neisseria meningitidis GNA2132, a heparin-binding protein that induces protective immunity in humans

Davide Serruto; Tiziana Spadafina; Laura Ciucchi; Lisa A. Lewis; Sanjay Ram; Marta Tontini; Laura Santini; Alessia Biolchi; Kate L. Seib; Marzia Monica Giuliani; John Donnelly; Francesco Berti; Silvana Savino; Maria Scarselli; Paolo Costantino; J. Simon Kroll; Clíona O’Dwyer; Jiazhou Qiu; Andrew G. Plaut; Richard Moxon; Rino Rappuoli; Mariagrazia Pizza; Beatrice Aricò

GNA2132 is a Neisseria meningitidis antigen of unknown function, discovered by reverse vaccinology, which has been shown to induce bactericidal antibodies in animal models. Here we show that this antigen induces protective immunity in humans and it is recognized by sera of patients after meningococcal disease. The protein binds heparin in vitro through an Arg-rich region and this property correlates with increased survival of the unencapsulated bacterium in human serum. Furthermore, two proteases, the meningococcal NalP and human lactoferrin, cleave the protein upstream and downstream from the Arg-rich region, respectively. We conclude that GNA2132 is an important protective antigen of N. meningitidis and we propose to rename it, Neisserial Heparin Binding Antigen (NHBA).


Vaccine | 2013

Bactericidal antibody against a representative epidemiological meningococcal serogroup B panel confirms that MATS underestimates 4CMenB vaccine strain coverage

Giacomo Frosi; Alessia Biolchi; Morena Lo Sapio; Fabio Rigat; Stefanie Gilchrist; Jay Lucidarme; Jamie Findlow; Ray Borrow; Mariagrazia Pizza; Marzia Monica Giuliani; Duccio Medini

BACKGROUND 4CMenB (Bexsero), a vaccine developed against invasive meningococcal disease caused by capsular group B strains (MenB), was recently licensed for use by the European Medicines Agency. Assessment of 4CMenB strain coverage in specific epidemiologic settings is of primary importance to predict vaccination impact on the burden of disease. The Meningococcal Antigen Typing System (MATS) was developed to predict 4CMenB strain coverage, using serum bactericidal antibody assay with human complement (hSBA) data from a diverse panel of strains not representative of any specific epidemiology. OBJECTIVE To experimentally validate the accuracy of MATS-based predictions against strains representative of a specific epidemiologic setting. METHODS AND RESULTS We used a stratified sampling method to identify a representative sample from all MenB disease isolates collected from England and Wales in 2007-2008, tested the strains in the hSBA assay with pooled sera from infant and adolescent vaccinees, and compared these results with MATS. MATS predictions and hSBA results were significantly associated (P=0.022). MATS predicted coverage of 70% (95% CI, 55-85%) was largely confirmed by 88% killing in the hSBA (95% CI, 72-95%). MATS had 78% accuracy and 96% positive predictive value against hSBA. CONCLUSION MATS is a conservative predictor of strain coverage by the 4CMenB vaccine in infants and adolescents.


Vaccine | 2010

Measuring antigen-specific bactericidal responses to a multicomponent vaccine against serogroup B meningococcus

Marzia Monica Giuliani; Alessia Biolchi; Davide Serruto; Francesca Ferlicca; Kay Vienken; Philipp Oster; Rino Rappuoli; Mariagrazia Pizza; John Donnelly

Serum bactericidal activity using human complement is the basis for established correlates of protection against invasive meningococcal disease. During the development of multicomponent protein-based vaccines against meningococcus B, it is necessary to measure antigen-specific bactericidal responses. This is not straightforward because each strain may be killed by antibodies to multiple antigens. We characterized a large panel of strains and, using a competitive inhibition SBA, we identified four strains that are each specifically killed by bactericidal antibodies to one of the major vaccine components. These strains provide a straightforward approach to demonstrate protective responses to each component of the vaccine and demonstrate that each of the antigens in the vaccine is sufficient to provide a potentially protective level of bactericidal activity.


Vaccine | 2011

Influence of sequence variability on bactericidal activity sera induced by Factor H binding protein variant 1.1

Brunella Brunelli; Elena Del Tordello; Emmanuelle Palumbo; Alessia Biolchi; Stefania Bambini; Maurizio Comanducci; Alessandro Muzzi; Mariagrazia Pizza; Rino Rappuoli; John Donnelly; Marzia Monica Giuliani; Davide Serruto

Factor H binding protein (fHbp), one of the main antigens of new vaccines against serogroup B meningococcus, varies in amino acid sequence and level of expression in different clinical isolates. To evaluate the contribution of amino acid sequence variability to vaccine coverage, we constructed a strain that is susceptible to bactericidal killing only by anti-fHbp antibodies and engineered it to express equal levels of 10 different fHbp sub-variants from a constitutive promoter. Testing of these isogenic strains showed that sera from mice or adult volunteers vaccinated with fHbp variant 1.1 were bactericidal against all sub-variants 1 sequences, however the titer against the most distant sequences were several times lower. Sera from vaccinated infants were more susceptible to amino acid variations and they had lower or no bactericidal activity against the distant sub-variants 1 sequences in comparison with sera from adults given the same vaccines. The low coverage provided by fHbp could be overcome using a multicomponent vaccine. We conclude that fHbp is a very important antigen that induces bactericidal antibodies in animals, adults and infants. However, given its high variability of sequence and expression level, it is unlikely that fHbp alone can provide good protection in infants against the distant amino acid sequence variants and therefore multicomponent vaccines inducing protective immunity also against other antigens are more likely to induce a broad protective immunity in all age groups.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2016

Effectiveness of Meningococcal B Vaccine against Endemic Hypervirulent Neisseriameningitidis W Strain, England

Shamez Ladhani; Marzia Monica Giuliani; Alessia Biolchi; Mariagrazia Pizza; Kazim Beebeejaun; Jay Lucidarme; Jamie Findlow; Mary Ramsay; Ray Borrow

Serum samples from children immunized with a meningococcal serogroup B vaccine demonstrated potent serum bactericidal antibody activity against the hypervirulent Neisseria meningitidis serogroup W strain circulating in England. The recent introduction of this vaccine into the United Kingdom national immunization program should also help protect infants against this endemic strain.


Infection and Immunity | 2013

Transcriptional Regulation of the nadA Gene in Neisseria meningitidis Impacts the Prediction of Coverage of a Multicomponent Meningococcal Serogroup B Vaccine

Luca Fagnocchi; Alessia Biolchi; Francesca Ferlicca; Giuseppe Boccadifuoco; Brunella Brunelli; Sébastien Brier; Nathalie Norais; Emiliano Chiarot; Giuliano Bensi; J. Simon Kroll; Mariagrazia Pizza; John Donnelly; Marzia Monica Giuliani; Isabel Delany

ABSTRACT The NadA adhesin is a major component of 4CMenB, a novel vaccine to prevent meningococcus serogroup B (MenB) infection. Under in vitro growth conditions, nadA is repressed by the regulator NadR and poorly expressed, resulting in inefficient killing of MenB strains by anti-NadA antibodies. Interestingly, sera from children infected with strains that express low levels of NadA in laboratory growth nevertheless recognize the NadA antigen, suggesting that NadA expression during infection may be different from that observed in vitro. In a strain panel covering a range of NadA levels, repression was relieved through deleting nadR. All nadR knockout strains expressed high levels of NadA and were efficiently killed by sera from subjects immunized with 4CMenB. A selected MenB strain, NGP165, mismatched for other vaccine antigens, is not killed by sera from immunized infants when the strain is grown in vitro. However, in an in vivo passive protection model, the same sera effectively protected infant rats from bacteremia with NGP165. Furthermore, we identify a novel hydroxyphenylacetic acid (HPA) derivative, reported by others to be produced during inflammation, which induces expression of NadA in vitro, leading to efficient antibody-mediated killing. Finally, using bioluminescent reporters, nadA expression in the infant rat model was induced in vivo at 3 h postinfection. Our results suggest that during infectious disease, NadR repression is alleviated due to niche-specific signals, resulting in high levels of NadA expression from any nadA-positive (nadA +) strain and therefore efficient killing by anti-NadA antibodies elicited by the 4CMenB vaccine.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Expression of factor H binding protein in meningococcal strains can vary at least 15-fold and is genetically determined

Massimiliano Biagini; Marco Spinsanti; Gabriella De Angelis; Ilaria Ferlenghi; Maria Scarselli; Fabio Rigat; Nicola Messuti; Alessia Biolchi; Alessandro Muzzi; Giulia Anderloni; Brunella Brunelli; Elena Cartocci; Francesca Buricchi; Chiara Tani; Maria Stella; Monica Moschioni; Elena Del Tordello; Annalisa Colaprico; Silvana Savino; Marzia Monica Giuliani; Isabel Delany; Mariagrazia Pizza; Paolo Costantino; Nathalie Norais; Rino Rappuoli; Vega Masignani

Significance Complement is the main line of defense against bacterial pathogens; however, the molecular mechanisms triggering killing are largely unknown. Factor H binding protein (fHbp) is a component of two licensed vaccines against serogroup B meningococcus and a key target of complement-mediated bacterial killing. Selected reaction monitoring was used for the absolute quantification of fHbp on invasive meningococcal strains, showing that expression among strains can vary at least 15-fold and a minimum of 757 molecules separated by not more than 130 nm are required to engage C1q and kill the bacteria. Furthermore, the amount of fHbp is genetically determined by the sequence of the promoter region and correlated with the bactericidal activity. These findings increase the understanding of complement-mediated killing and vaccine protection. Factor H binding protein (fHbp) is a lipoprotein of Neisseria meningitidis important for the survival of the bacterium in human blood and a component of two recently licensed vaccines against serogroup B meningococcus (MenB). Based on 866 different amino acid sequences this protein is divided into three variants or two families. Quantification of the protein is done by immunoassays such as ELISA or FACS that are susceptible to the sequence variation and expression level of the protein. Here, selected reaction monitoring mass spectrometry was used for the absolute quantification of fHbp in a large panel of strains representative of the population diversity of MenB. The analysis revealed that the level of fHbp expression can vary at least 15-fold and that variant 1 strains express significantly more protein than variant 2 or variant 3 strains. The susceptibility to complement-mediated killing correlated with the amount of protein expressed by the different meningococcal strains and this could be predicted from the nucleotide sequence of the promoter region. Finally, the absolute quantification allowed the calculation of the number of fHbp molecules per cell and to propose a mechanistic model of the engagement of C1q, the recognition component of the complement cascade.


Expert Review of Vaccines | 2015

Outbreaks of meningococcal B infection and the 4CMenB vaccine: historical and future perspectives

Jane Whelan; Stefania Bambini; Alessia Biolchi; Brunella Brunelli; Mirna Robert–Du Ry van Beest Holle

Strains of Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B (MenB) causing invasive meningococcal disease are genetically diverse; however, only a small number of hyperinvasive lineages (CC32, CC41/44, CC269 and CC162) have dominated during the global spread over the past 50 years. Since the mid-1970s, major outbreaks and hyperendemic disease have been reported in Norway, Cuba, France, Canada, New Zealand (and elsewhere), most recently in the USA. We characterized the epidemiology of these MenB outbreaks and their associated clonal complexes and retrospectively assessed the potential coverage offered by the 4CMenB vaccine, a four-component vaccine developed to help confer protection against a broad range of meningococcal B strains causing disease. Of 21 isolates from four clonal complexes evaluated using both human Serum Bactericidal Assay and the Meningococcal Antigen Testing System, coverage ranged from 67 to 100%. 4CMenB shows good potential as a candidate vaccine to be used in the control of new MenB outbreaks globally.


Vaccine | 2009

Structural organization of NadAΔ351–405, a recombinant MenB vaccine component, by its physico-chemical characterization at drug substance level

Claudia Magagnoli; Angela Bardotti; Giuseppe De Conciliis; Rosy Galasso; Matteo Tomei; Cristiana Campa; Carlo Pennatini; Maruska Cerchioni; Barbara Fabbri; Sara Giannini; Giovanni Luigi Mattioli; Alessia Biolchi; Sandro D’Ascenzi; Friedhelm Helling

The physico-chemical characterization of NadADelta(351-405), a recombinant protein discovered by reverse vaccinology, component of a candidate vaccine against Neisseria meningitidis serotype B is presented. Analytical methods like mass spectrometry, electrophoresis, optical spectroscopy and SEC-MALLS have been applied to unveil the structure of NadADelta(351-405), and to evaluate Product-Related Substances. Moreover, analysis of the protein after intentional denaturation has been applied in order to challenge the chosen methods and to determine their appropriateness and specificity. All the obtained results were inserted in a model allowing in-depth understanding of the antigen NadADelta(351-405): it is present in solution as a homo-trimer, retaining a high percentage of alpha-helix secondary structure, and able to reassemble from monomeric subunits after thermal denaturation; this structural organization is consistent with that foreseen for MenB NadA (Neisseria Adhesin A). The analytical data sets produced during process development for clinical phases I-III material confirm product quality and manufacturing consistency.

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