TY - JOUR A1 - Roier, Sandro A1 - Leitner, Deborah R. A1 - Iwashkiw, Jeremy A1 - Schild-Prüfert, Kristina A1 - Feldman, Mario F. A1 - Krohne, Georg A1 - Reidl, Joachim A1 - Schild, Stefan T1 - Intranasal Immunization with Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae Outer Membrane Vesicles Induces Cross-Protective Immunity in Mice JF - PLoS One N2 - Haemophilus influenzae is a Gram-negative human-restricted bacterium that can act as a commensal and a pathogen of the respiratory tract. Especially nontypeable H. influenzae (NTHi) is a major threat to public health and is responsible for several infectious diseases in humans, such as pneumonia, sinusitis, and otitis media. Additionally, NTHi strains are highly associated with exacerbations in patients suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Currently, there is no licensed vaccine against NTHi commercially available. Thus, this study investigated the utilization of outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) as a potential vaccine candidate against NTHi infections. We analyzed the immunogenic and protective properties of OMVs derived from various NTHi strains by means of nasopharyngeal immunization and colonization studies with BALB/c mice. The results presented herein demonstrate that an intranasal immunization with NTHi OMVs results in a robust and complex humoral and mucosal immune response. Immunoprecipitation revealed the most important immunogenic proteins, such as the heme utilization protein, protective surface antigen D15, heme binding protein A, and the outer membrane proteins P1, P2, P5 and P6. The induced immune response conferred not only protection against colonization with a homologous NTHi strain, which served as an OMV donor for the immunization mixtures, but also against a heterologous NTHi strain, whose OMVs were not part of the immunization mixtures. These findings indicate that OMVs derived from NTHi strains have a high potential to act as a vaccine against NTHi infections. KW - conjugate KW - obstructive pulmonary disease KW - vaccine KW - vibrio cholerae KW - detoxified lipooligosaccharide KW - nasopharyngeal colonization KW - functional characterization KW - growing escherichia coli KW - DNA-binding vesicles KW - otitis media KW - hemophilus influenzae Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-135201 VL - 7 IS - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sturm, Julia B. A1 - Hess, Michael A1 - Weibel, Stephanie A1 - Chen, Nanhei G. A1 - Yu, Yong A. A1 - Zhang, Quian A1 - Donat, Ulrike A1 - Reiss, Cora A1 - Gambaryan, Stepan A1 - Krohne, Georg A1 - Stritzker, Jochen A1 - Szalay, Aladar A. T1 - Functional hyper-IL-6 from vaccinia virus-colonized tumors triggers platelet formation and helps to alleviate toxicity of mitomycin C enhanced virus therapy N2 - Background: Combination of oncolytic vaccinia virus therapy with conventional chemotherapy has shown promise for tumor therapy. However, side effects of chemotherapy including thrombocytopenia, still remain problematic. Methods: Here, we describe a novel approach to optimize combination therapy of oncolytic virus and chemotherapy utilizing virus-encoding hyper-IL-6, GLV-1h90, to reduce chemotherapy-associated side effects. Results: We showed that the hyper-IL-6 cytokine was successfully produced by GLV-1h90 and was functional both in cell culture as well as in tumor-bearing animals, in which the cytokine-producing vaccinia virus strain was well tolerated. When combined with the chemotherapeutic mitomycin C, the anti-tumor effect of the oncolytic virotherapy was significantly enhanced. Moreover, hyper-IL-6 expression greatly reduced the time interval during which the mice suffered from chemotherapy-induced thrombocytopenia. Conclusion: Therefore, future clinical application would benefit from careful investigation of additional cytokine treatment to reduce chemotherapy-induced side effects. KW - Biologie KW - vaccinia virus KW - cancer KW - cytokine KW - hyper-IL-6 KW - oncolysis KW - chemotherapy Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75224 ER -