1 research outputs found
Molecular Signature of Monocytes Shaped by the Shigella sonnei 1790-Generalized Modules for Membrane Antigens Vaccine
Shigellosis, an acute gastroenteritis infection caused by Shigella species, remains a public
health burden in developing countries. Recently, many outbreaks due to Shigella sonnei multidrugresistant
strains have been reported in high-income countries, and the lack of an effective vaccine represents
a major hurdle to counteract this bacterial pathogen. Vaccine candidates against Shigella sonnei
are under clinical development, including a Generalized Modules for Membrane Antigens (GMMA)-
based vaccine. The mechanisms by which GMMA-based vaccines interact and activate human
immune cells remain elusive. Our previous study provided the first evidence that both adaptive
and innate immune cells are targeted and functionally shaped by the GMMA-based vaccine. Here,
flow cytometry and confocal microscopy analysis allowed us to identify monocytes as the main
target population interacting with the S. sonnei 1790-GMMA vaccine on human peripheral blood.
In addition, transcriptomic analysis of this cell population revealed a molecular signature induced
by 1790-GMMA mostly correlated with the inflammatory response and cytokine-induced processes.
This also impacts the expression of genes associated with macrophages’ differentiation and T cell
regulation, suggesting a dual function for this vaccine platform both as an antigen carrier and as a
regulator of immune cell activation and differentiation