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Carmen Alvarez-Dominguez

Carmen Alvarez-Dominguez

Instituto de Investigación Marqués de Valdecilla, Spain

Title: Nanovaccines to prevent neonatal listeriosis

Biography

Biography: Carmen Alvarez-Dominguez

Abstract

Clinical cases of neonatal listeriosis are associated with brain disease and fetal loss due to complications in early or late pregnancy, which suggests that microglial function is altered. This is believed to be the first study to link microglial apoptosis with neonatal listeriosis and listeriosis-associated brain disease, and to propose a new nanovaccine formulation that reverses all effects of listeriosis and confers Listeria monocytogenes (LM) specific immunity. We examined clinical cases of neonatal listeriosis in 2013–2015 and defined two useful prognostic immune biomarkers to design listeriosis vaccines: high anti-GAPDH1-22 titres and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)/interleukin (IL)-6 ratios. Therefore, we developed a nanovaccine with gold glyco-nanoparticles conjugated to short LM peptides and formulated with a pro-inflammatory Toll-like receptor 2/4-targeted adjuvant. The neonates born to nanovaccinated pregnant mice’s with listeriosis, showed brain and vascular disease and significant microglial dysfunction by induction of TNF-α-mediated apoptosis. This programmed TNF-mediated suicide explains LM dissemination in brains and livers and blocks production of early pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IL-1β and interferon-α/β. In contrast, neonates born to nanovaccinated mothers before LM infection, did not develop listeriosis or brain diseases and had functional microglia. In nanovaccinated mothers, immune responses shifted towards Th1/IL-12 pro-inflammatory cytokine profiles and high production of anti-LM antibodies, suggesting good induction of LM-specific memory.