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  • Title: Antibody response to pneumolysin and to pneumococcal capsular polysaccharide in healthy individuals and Streptococcus pneumoniae infected patients.
    Author: Huo Z, Spencer O, Miles J, Johnson J, Holliman R, Sheldon J, Riches P.
    Journal: Vaccine; 2004 Mar 12; 22(9-10):1157-61. PubMed ID: 15003643.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Animal experiments have shown that antibodies against capsular polysaccharide enhance phagocytosis of pneumococcal bacteria and that antibodies against pneumolysin are anti-inflammatory and prevent pneumococcal invasion. It is not known if an antibody response to pneumolysin can be acquired from natural exposure to pneumococcal bacteria or how the concentration of pneumolysin antibody at the mucosal surface compares with that of antibodies against pneumococcal capsular polysaccharide. This study used an equal potency method to measure specific antibody concentrations against pneumolysin and pneumococcal capsular polysaccharides in order to facilitate comparative estimates of concentrations in saliva and serum. The results may provide experimental information as a basis for an improved pneumococcal vaccine strategy. RESULTS: Healthy individuals had higher IgM and IgG antibody concentrations against capsular polysaccharide than against pneumolysin in both saliva and serum, but for IgA the converse was true. Patients with acute pneumococcal infection had significantly lower concentrations of specific IgG antibodies against both antigens than the healthy group. These patients also had significantly higher concentrations of IgM antibody against both antigens than the healthy control group. DISCUSSION: Healthy individuals acquire a comparatively lower concentration of antibody to pneumolysin than to pneumococcal capsular polysaccharides from natural exposure to pneumococcal bacteria. Patients infected by pneumococcal bacteria have lower specific IgG antibody concentrations to both antigens than healthy individuals. These findings support the view that pneumolysin could potentially be used as a vaccine. For enhanced effectiveness, it could be used as a supplement to Pneumovax((R))II rather than as a replacement. The two acquired antibodies, i.e. to pneumolysin and to capsular polysaccharide, could then play their protective roles at different stages in the course of pneumococcal infection, and together contribute to an effective immune defence against Streptococcus pneumoniae.
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