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Dive into the research topics where Elena Mori is active.

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Featured researches published by Elena Mori.


Vaccine | 2010

Beta-glucan-CRM197 conjugates as candidates antifungal vaccines.

Carla Bromuro; Maria Rosaria Romano; Paola Chiani; Francesco Berti; Marta Tontini; Daniela Proietti; Elena Mori; Antonella Torosantucci; Paolo Costantino; Rino Rappuoli; Antonio Cassone

A laminarin-diphtheria toxoid (CRM197) conjugate vaccine conferred protection against fungal infections in mice. We have now generated novel beta-glucan-CRM197 vaccines, with either natural (Curd-CRM197) or synthetic linear (15mer-CRM197), or beta-(1,6)-branched (17mer-CRM197) beta-(1,3)-oligosaccharides, formulated with the human-acceptable adjuvant MF59. Curd-CRM197 and 15mer-CRM197 conjugates, which induced high titers of anti-beta-(1,3)-glucan IgG, but no antibodies against beta-(1,6)-glucan, conferred protection to mice lethally challenged with C. albicans. In contrast, the 17mer-CRM197 conjugate, which induced anti-beta-(1,6)-glucan antibodies in addition to the anti-beta-(1,3)-glucan IgG, was non-protective. These data provide some insights on beta-glucan epitope(s) mediating antifungal protection and open the way to develop a synthetic oligosaccharide vaccine against fungal diseases.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Vaccine composition formulated with a novel TLR7-dependent adjuvant induces high and broad protection against Staphylococcus aureus.

Fabio Bagnoli; Maria Rita Fontana; Elisabetta Soldaini; Ravi Mishra; Luigi Fiaschi; Elena Cartocci; Vincenzo Nardi-Dei; Paolo Ruggiero; Sarah Nosari; Maria Grazia De Falco; Giuseppe Lofano; Sara Marchi; Bruno Galletti; Paolo Mariotti; Antonina Torre; Silvia Maccari; Maria Scarselli; C. Daniela Rinaudo; Naoko Inoshima; Silvana Savino; Elena Mori; Silvia Rossi-Paccani; Barbara Baudner; Michele Pallaoro; Erwin Swennen; Roberto Petracca; Cecilia Brettoni; Sabrina Liberatori; Nathalie Norais; Elisabetta Monaci

Significance Staphylococcus aureus is a human pathogen causing life-threatening infections. The high incidence of methicillin-resistant S. aureus isolates resistant to all antibiotics makes the development of anti-S. aureus vaccines an urgent medical need. However, the unique ability of S. aureus to produce virulent factors, which counteract virtually all pathways of innate and adaptive immunity, has hampered all vaccine discovery efforts. Starting from the assumption that to be effective a vaccine should induce highly functional antibodies and potentiate the killing capacity of phagocytic cells, we selected a cocktail of five conserved antigens involved in different mechanisms of pathogenesis, and we formulated them with a potent adjuvant. This vaccine provides an unprecedented protective efficacy against S. aureus infection in animal models. Both active and passive immunization strategies against Staphylococcus aureus have thus far failed to show efficacy in humans. With the attempt to develop an effective S. aureus vaccine, we selected five conserved antigens known to have different roles in S. aureus pathogenesis. They include the secreted factors α-hemolysin (Hla), ess extracellular A (EsxA), and ess extracellular B (EsxB) and the two surface proteins ferric hydroxamate uptake D2 and conserved staphylococcal antigen 1A. The combined vaccine antigens formulated with aluminum hydroxide induced antibodies with opsonophagocytic and functional activities and provided consistent protection in four mouse models when challenged with a panel of epidemiologically relevant S. aureus strains. The importance of antibodies in protection was demonstrated by passive transfer experiments. Furthermore, when formulated with a toll-like receptor 7-dependent (TLR7) agonist recently designed and developed in our laboratories (SMIP.7–10) adsorbed to alum, the five antigens provided close to 100% protection against four different staphylococcal strains. The new formulation induced not only high antibody titers but also a Th1 skewed immune response as judged by antibody isotype and cytokine profiles. In addition, low frequencies of IL-17–secreting T cells were also observed. Altogether, our data demonstrate that the rational selection of mixtures of conserved antigens combined with Th1/Th17 adjuvants can lead to promising vaccine formulations against S. aureus.


Infection and Immunity | 2012

RrgB321, a fusion protein of the three variants of the pneumococcal pilus backbone RrgB, is protective in vivo and elicits opsonic antibodies.

Carole Harfouche; Sara Filippini; Claudia Gianfaldoni; Paolo Ruggiero; Monica Moschioni; Silvia Maccari; Laura Pancotto; Letizia Arcidiacono; Bruno Galletti; Stefano Censini; Elena Mori; Marzia Monica Giuliani; Claudia Facciotti; Elena Cartocci; Silvana Savino; Francesco Doro; Michele Pallaoro; Salvatore Nocadello; Giuseppe Mancuso; Mitch Haston; David Goldblatt; Michèle A. Barocchi; Mariagrazia Pizza; Rino Rappuoli; Vega Masignani

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.


Infection and Immunity | 2004

N19 Polyepitope as a Carrier for Enhanced Immunogenicity and Protective Efficacy of Meningococcal Conjugate Vaccines

Karin Baraldo; Elena Mori; Antonella Bartoloni; Roberto Petracca; Aldo Giannozzi; Francesco Norelli; Rino Rappuoli; Guido Grandi; Giuseppe Del Giudice

ABSTRACT N19, a string of human universal CD4 T-cell epitopes from various pathogen-derived antigens, was shown to exert a stronger carrier effect than CRM197 for the induction of anti-group C Neisseria meningitidis capsular polysaccharide (MenC), after immunization of mice with various dosages of N19-MenC or CRM-MenC conjugate vaccines. After two immunizations, the N19-based construct induced anti-MenC antibody and protective bactericidal antibody titers higher than those induced by three doses of the CRM-MenC conjugate and required lower amounts of conjugate. N19-based conjugates are superior to CRM-based conjugates to induce protective immune responses to MenC conjugates.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2012

Hyporesponsiveness Following Booster Immunization With Bacterial Polysaccharides Is Caused by Apoptosis of Memory B Cells

Siggeir F. Brynjolfsson; Maren Henneken; Stefania P. Bjarnarson; Elena Mori; Giuseppe Del Giudice; Ingileif Jonsdottir

BACKGROUND Repeated immunizations with polysaccharide (PS) vaccines cause hyporesponsiveness through undefined mechanisms. We assessed the effects of a PS booster on immune responses, frequency, and survival of PS-specific B-cell subpopulations in spleen and bone marrow. METHODS Neonatal mice were primed with meningococcus serotype C (MenC) conjugate MenC-CRM(197)+CpG1826, boosted with MenC-CRM(197), MenC-PS, or saline; subsequently, bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) was injected daily intraperitoneally. MenC-PS-specific cells were labeled with fluorescent MenC-PS and phenotyped by flow cytometry. RESULTS After MenC-PS booster, proliferating (BrdU(+)) MenC-PS-specific naive B cells (CD138(-)/B220(+); P = .0003) and plasma cells (CD138(+)/B220(-); P = .0002) in spleen were fewer than after saline booster. BrdU(+) MenC-PS-specific plasma cells were also reduced in bone marrow (P = .0308). Compared to saline, MenC-PS booster reduced BrdU(+) IgG(+) MenC-PS-specific B cells in spleen (P = .0002). Twelve hours after the MenC-PS booster, an increased frequency of apoptotic (AnnexinV(+)) MenC-PS-specific B cells in spleen was observed compared with MenC-CRM(197) (P = .0286) or saline (P = .001) boosters. CONCLUSIONS We demonstrated that the MenC-PS booster significantly reduced the frequency of newly activated MenC-PS-specific B cells-mostly switched IgG(+) memory cells-by driving them into apoptosis. It shows directly that apoptosis of PS-specific memory cells is the cause of PS-induced hyporesponsiveness. These results should be taken into account prior to consideration of the use of PS vaccines.


Vaccine | 2012

Immunization with the RrgB321 fusion protein protects mice against both high and low pilus-expressing Streptococcus pneumoniae populations

Monica Moschioni; Gabriella De Angelis; Carole Harfouche; Esmeralda Bizzarri; Sara Filippini; Elena Mori; Giuseppe Mancuso; Francesco Doro; Michèle A. Barocchi; Paolo Ruggiero; Vega Masignani

RrgB321, a fusion protein of the three Streptococcus pneumoniae pilus-1 backbone RrgB variants, is protective in vivo against pilus islet 1 (PI-1) positive pneumococci. In addition, antibodies to RrgB321 mediate a complement-dependent opsonophagocytosis of PI-1 positive strains at levels comparable to those obtained with antisera against glycoconjugate vaccines. In the pneumococcus, pilus-1 displays a biphasic expression pattern, with different proportions of two bacterial phenotypes, one expressing and one not expressing the pilus-1. These two populations can be stably separated in vitro giving rise to the enriched high (H) and low (L) pilus expressing populations. In this work we demonstrate that: (i) the opsonophagocytic killing mediated in vitro by RrgB321 antisera is strictly dependent on the pilus expression ratio of the strain used; (ii) during the opsonophagocytosis assay pilus-expressing pneumococci are selectively killed, and (iii) no switch towards the pilus non-expressing phenotype can be observed. Furthermore, in sepsis and pneumonia models, mice immunized with RrgB321 are significantly protected against challenge with either the H or the L pilus-expressing population of strains representative of the three RrgB variants. This suggests that the pilus-1 expression is not down-regulated, and also that the expression of the pilus-1 could be up-regulated in vivo. In conclusion, these data provide evidence that RrgB321 is protective against PI-1 positive strains regardless of their pilus expression level, and support the rationale for the inclusion of this fusion protein into a multi-component protein-based pneumococcal vaccine.


Infection and Immunity | 2005

Combined conjugate vaccines: enhanced immunogenicity with the N19 polyepitope as a carrier protein.

Karin Baraldo; Elena Mori; Antonella Bartoloni; Francesco Norelli; Guido Grandi; Rino Rappuoli; Oretta Finco; Giuseppe Del Giudice

ABSTRACT The N19 polyepitope, consisting of a sequential string of universal human CD4+-T-cell epitopes, was tested as a carrier protein in a formulation of combined glycoconjugate vaccines containing the capsular polysaccharides (PSs) of Neisseria meningitidis serogroups A, C, W-135, and Y. Good antibody responses to all four polysaccharides were induced by one single immunization of mice with N19-based conjugates. Two immunizations with N19 conjugates elicited anti-MenACWY antibody titers comparable to those induced after three doses of glycoconjugates containing CRM197 as carrier protein. Compared to cross-reacting material (CRM)-based constructs, lower amounts of N19-MenACWY conjugates still induced high bactericidal titers to all four PSs. Moreover, N19-MenACWY-conjugated constructs induced faster and higher antibody avidity maturation against meningococcal C PS than CRM-based conjugates. Very importantly, N19-specific antibodies did not cross-react with the parent protein from which N19 epitopes were derived, e.g., tetanus toxoid and influenza virus hemagglutinin. Finally, T helper epitopes of the N19 carrier protein were effectively generated both in vivo (after immunization with the N19 itself) and in vitro (after restimulation of epitope-specific spleen cells). Taken together, these data show that the N19 polyepitope represents a strong and valid option for the generation of improved or new combined glycoconjugate vaccines.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2012

A new flow-cytometry-based opsonophagocytosis assay for the rapid measurement of functional antibody levels against Group B Streptococcus.

Monica Fabbrini; Chiara Sammicheli; Immaculada Margarit; Domenico Maione; Guido Grandi; Marzia Monica Giuliani; Elena Mori; Sandra Nuti

Opsonophagocytosis is the primary mechanism for the clearance of Group B Streptococcus (GBS) by the host, and levels of opsonic antibodies may correlate with protection in preclinical models. A killing-based opsonophagocytosis assay (OPA), can be used to determine the functional activity of vaccine-induced GBS-specific antibodies. The assay, which measures the number of bacterial colonies surviving phagocytic killing in the presence of specific antibodies and complement, is rather expensive, time-consuming and poorly standardized. Here we describe a rapid, sensitive and reproducible fluorescent OPA assay (fOPA) based on flow cytometry analysis (FACS), which allows internalized bacteria to be distinguished from those associated to the plasma membrane of phagocytic cells. Fixed GBS were labeled with pHrodo™, a fluorescent dye which dramatically increases the emitted fluorescence at the acidic conditions present in the phagocytic endosomal compartment. Labeled bacteria were incubated with HL-60 cells differentiated to phagocytes, antibodies and complement, and then analyzed by FACS. A further improvement to our method, allowing to reduce assay variability, consisted on a step of selection of effector cells among the HL-60 population. Analysis of sera from mice immunized with different GBS vaccines revealed comparable sensitivity and specificity with the traditional killing OPA assay (kOPA), and a good correlation between the fluorescent signal of bacteria internalized by HL-60 phagocytes and killing. Remarkably, the pHrodo-based approach reduced the variability observed with other fOPA assays. The obtained data indicate the proposed fOPA as a reliable and useful tool for functional antibody assessment.


Vaccine | 2008

Neonatal immune response and serum bactericidal activity induced by a meningococcal conjugate vaccine is enhanced by LT-K63 and CpG2006

Siggeir F. Brynjolfsson; Stefania P. Bjarnarson; Elena Mori; Giuseppe Del Giudice; Ingileif Jonsdottir

Neonates have a poorly developed immune system. Therefore it is important to develop vaccination strategies that induce protective immunity and immunological memory against pathogens early in life. The immunogenicity of a meningococcal serogroup C polysaccharide conjugate (MenC-CRM(197)) was assessed in neonatal mice, and effects of LT-K63 and CpG2006 and immunisation routes were compared. Neonatal mice were primed subcutaneously (s.c.) or intranasally (i.n.) with MenC-CRM(197) with or without LT-K63 or CpG2006 and re-immunised 16 and 30 days later by the same route and formulation. Antibody levels were measured and generation of immunological memory assessed by affinity maturation and kinetics of the Ab response. Serum bactericidal activity (SBA) was measured to evaluate protective efficacy. The second and third dose of MenC-CRM(197) mixed with either LT-K63 or CpG2006 induced a rapid increase in MenC-specific IgG antibodies, to levels higher than elicited by MenC-CRM(197) alone (P<0.01) and in unimmunised mice (P<0.001), indicating efficient generation of memory by priming through both s.c. and i.n. routes. SBA was detected after three s.c. immunisations with MenC-CRM(197) s.c. alone. However, only two doses of MenC-CRM(197)+LT-K63 or MenC-CRM(197)+CpG2006 were needed to induce SBA levels>16. LT-K63 and CpG2006 enhanced neonatal antibody responses, affinity maturation, immunological memory to the conjugate MenC-CRM(197) and protective immunity. These results encourage the development of neonatal vaccination strategies to induce protective immunity and immunological memory against meningococcal disease.


Glycoconjugate Journal | 2014

Investigating the immunodominance of carbohydrate antigens in a bivalent unimolecular glycoconjugate vaccine against serogroup A and C meningococcal disease.

Roberto Adamo; Alberto Nilo; Carole Harfouche; Barbara Brogioni; Simone Pecetta; Giulia Brogioni; Evita Balducci; Vittoria Pinto; Sara Filippini; Elena Mori; Marta Tontini; Maria Rosaria Romano; Paolo Costantino; Francesco Berti

Multicomponent constructs, obtained by coupling different glycans to the carrier protein, have been proposed as a way to co-deliver multiple surface carbohydrates targeting different strains of one pathogen and reduce the number of biomolecules in the formulation of multivalent vaccines. To assess the feasibility of this approach for anti-microbial vaccines and investigate the potential immunodominance of one carbohydrate antigen over the others in these constructs, we designed a bivalent unimolecular vaccine against serogroup A (MenA) and C (MenC) meningococci, with the two different oligomers conjugated to same molecule of carrier protein (CRM197). The immune response elicited in mice by the bivalent MenAC construct was compared with the ones induced by the monovalent MenA and MenC vaccines and their combinations. After the second dose, the bivalent construct induced good levels of anti-MenA and anti-MenC antibodies with respect to the controls. However, the murine sera from the MenAC construct exhibited good anti-MenC bactericidal activity, and very low anti-MenA functionality when compared to the monovalent controls. This result was explained with the diverse relative avidities against MenA and MenC polysaccharides, which were measured in the generated sera. The immunodominant effect of the MenC antigen was fully overcome following the third immunization, when sera endowed with higher avidity and excellent bactericidal activity against both MenA and MenC expressing strains were elicited. Construction of multicomponent glycoconjugate vaccines against microbial pathogens is a feasible approach, but particular attention should be devoted to study and overcome possible occurrence of immune interference among the carbohydrates.

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