Engineering and Evaluation of a Live-Attenuated Vaccine Candidate with Enhanced Type 1 Fimbriae Expression to Optimize Protection Against Salmonella Typhimurium
Patricia García, Arianna Rodríguez-Coello, Andrea García-Pose, María Del Carmen Fernández-López, Andrea Muras, Miriam Moscoso, Alejandro Beceiro, Germán Bou

TL;DR
Scientists engineered a Salmonella vaccine candidate to express more type 1 fimbriae, which improved protection in mice without affecting safety.
Contribution
The novel contribution is the inducible expression of type 1 fimbriae in a live-attenuated Salmonella vaccine to enhance mucosal immunity.
Findings
The modified vaccine showed increased fimbrial expression and improved adhesion to intestinal cells.
Immunization with the modified strain significantly reduced bacterial load in mice after challenge.
The vaccine elicited strong mucosal and systemic immune responses without altering colonization patterns.
Abstract
Background:Salmonella Typhimurium is a major zoonotic pathogen, in which type 1 fimbriae play a crucial role in intestinal colonization and immune modulation. This study aimed to improve the protective immunity of a previously developed growth-deficient strain—a double auxotroph for D-glutamate and D-alanine—by engineering the inducible expression of type 1 fimbriae. Methods: PtetA-driven expression of the fim operon was achieved by λ-Red mutagenesis. fimA expression was quantified by qRT-PCR, and fimbriation visualized by transmission electron microscopy. Adhesive properties were evaluated through FimH sequence analysis, yeast agglutination, mannose-binding/inhibition assays, and HT-29 cell adherence. BALB/c mice were immunized orogastrically with IRTA ΔΔΔ or IRTA ΔΔΔ PtetA::fim. Safety and immunogenicity were assessed by clinical monitoring, bacterial load, fecal shedding, ELISA…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSalmonella and Campylobacter epidemiology · Viral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology · Escherichia coli research studies
