Scientists from Singapore have found out why some vaccines are effective for some and not so for others.
Scientists from Singapore have found out why some vaccines are effective for some and not so for others. Researchers have shown that Mycobacterium chelonae, a common environmental bacterium found in soil and water, can decrease the effectiveness of the bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccine used to prevent tuberculosis, especially in countries outside of the United States.
"Uncovering the reasons why BCG is failing will help researchers in designing new, more effective vaccines against TB. This will give us more tools to fight this globally significant infectious disease," said Geok Teng Seah, a researcher involved in the work from the Department of Microbiology at the National University of Singapore.
To make this discovery, scientists studied mice with and without prior exposure to M. chelonae. When subsequently given BCG vaccine, the mice with prior exposure to M. chelonae produced higher amounts of suppressive chemical signals; these chemical signals are believed to reduce the level of immunity induced by BCG vaccine in the host mice.
Then the researchers extracted certain white blood cells with known suppressive functions from both exposed and unexposed mice. After transferring these cells into separate groups of unexposed mice, they found that recipients of suppressor cells from M. chelonae exposed mice did not respond as strongly to BCG vaccine as recipients of suppressor cells from unexposed donor mice.
This indicates that the suppressor cells from M. chelonae exposed mice are functionally different from those of unexposed mice. Ultimately, the data suggest that these suppressor cells, induced in the host when exposed to M. chelonae, dampen the effectiveness of the BCG vaccine.
The study has been published in the Journal of Leukocyte Biology.
Advertisement