The right time and place: time- and age-dependent vaccine-enhanced mucosal immunity to parasite infection

2021 
Individuals vary broadly in their response to vaccination and subsequent exposure to infection, causing persistence of both infection and transmission. The prevalence of poor vaccine responders hampers the development of vaccines, especially against parasitic helminths. Yet despite having substantial economic and societal impact, the immune mechanisms that underlie such variability, especially at the site of parasite infection, remain poorly understood. Previous trials using a prototype vaccine for the control of the gastric parasitic Teladorsagia circumcincta, one of the highest impact parasites affecting sheep, revealed substantial variation in protection between individuals, which we hypothesised may in part be driven by age at vaccination. Here, to characterise how immunity at the mucosal site of infection developed in vaccinated lambs, we inserted gastric cannulae into the abomasa (true stomachs) of three-month- and six-month-old lambs before vaccination, and performed a longitudinal analysis of their local immune response during subsequent challenge infection. We found that the vaccine caused systemic changes in the baseline immune profile within the abomasum before any parasite exposure had occurred and reduced parasite burden and egg output once lambs were infected, regardless of age. However, age affected how vaccinated lambs responded to subsequent infection across multiple immune pathways, with only a minority of protective immune pathways being independent of age. This resulted in younger lambs being more susceptible to infection regardless of vaccine status. The identification of age-dependent (mostly adaptive) and age-independent (mostly innate) protective immune pathways should help refine the formulation of vaccines against these and potentially other helminth parasites of ruminants, and could indicate specificities of anti-helminth immunity more generally.
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