Anti-microbial peptide gene expression during oral vaccination: analysis of a randomized controlled trial.
Simuyandi. M M; Kapulu. M M; Kelly. P P
Key Findings
- Live attenuated bacterial oral vaccines reduced intestinal LL‑37 and alpha‑defensin (HD5) expression
- Rotavirus oral vaccine did not affect LL‑37 or defensin levels
- Short‑term multiple micronutrient supplementation had no impact on LL‑37 or other antimicrobial peptide expression
Practical Outcomes
- If you receive a live bacterial oral vaccine, expect a short‑term drop in gut LL‑37, which might modestly affect local immunity. Micronutrient supplements won’t offset this change, so no specific dosing adjustments are needed based on this study.
Summary
A study looked at how oral vaccines affect gut antimicrobial peptides like LL‑37. It found that live bacterial vaccines (typhoid and ETEC) temporarily lowered LL‑37 and some defensins, while a rotavirus vaccine did not. Taking a short‑term multi‑micronutrient supplement didn’t change these peptide levels.
Abstract
We have observed previously that micronutrient supplementation ameliorated suppression of α-defensin expression during diarrhoea. However, how interactions between anti-microbial peptide (AMP) expression and diarrhoeal disease are altered by micronutrient supplementation remain unclear. Using oral vaccination as a model of intestinal infection, we measured changes in AMP expression during multiple micronutrient supplementation. In the first part, volunteers underwent duodenal jejunal biopsy before and at 1, 2, 4 or 7 days after administration of one of three live, attenuated oral vaccines against rotavirus, typhoid and enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli. In the second part, participants were randomized to receive a multiple micronutrient supplement or placebo for 6 weeks before undergoing intestinal biopsy, vaccination against typhoid and rebiopsy after 14 days. Expression of human alpha-defensin (HD)5, HD6, hBD1, hBD2 and LL-37 was measured by quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Taken together, the bacterial vaccines, but not rotavirus vaccine, reduced HD5 expression (P = 0·02, signed-rank test) and reduced LL-37 expression in seven of the eight individuals whose biopsies had expression prevaccination (P = 0·03). hBD2 was not detected. In the controlled trial, HD5 and HD6 expression after vaccination was lower [median ratio 0·5, interquartile range (IQR) = 0·07-2·2 and 0·58, IQR = 0·13-2·3, respectively] than before vaccination. There was no significant effect detected of micronutrient supplementation on expression of HD5, HD6, hBD1 or LL-37. We conclude that live attenuated bacterial vaccines, but not rotavirus vaccine, can reduce intestinal α-defensins, and typhoid vaccine reduced LL-37 expression. We found no evidence that micronutrient supplementation in the short term had any impact on anti-microbial peptide expression.
Study Information
pubmed
2016
2016-08-29T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/cei.12848
4
37