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A protein-free vaccine stimulates innate immunity and protects against nosocomial pathogens.

Science translational medicine

Authors: Jun Yan, Travis B Nielsen, Peggy Lu, Yuli Talyansky, Matt Slarve, Hernan Reza, Boris Novakovic, Mihai G Netea, Ashley E Keller, Troy Warren, Antonio DiGiandomenico, Bret R Sellman, Brian M Luna, Brad Spellberg

Traditional vaccines are difficult to deploy against the diverse antimicrobial-resistant, nosocomial pathogens that cause health care-associated infections. We developed a protein-free vaccine composed of aluminum hydroxide, monophosphoryl lipid A, and fungal mannan that improved survival and reduced bacterial burden of mice with invasive blood or lung infections caused by methicillin-resistant , vancomycin-resistant , extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-expressing , and carbapenem-resistant strains of , , and The vaccine also conferred protection against the fungi and . Efficacy was apparent by 24 hours and lasted for up to 28 days after a single vaccine dose, with a second dose restoring efficacy. The vaccine acted through stimulation of the innate, rather than the adaptive, immune system, as demonstrated by efficacy in the absence of lymphocytes that were abrogated by macrophage depletion. A role for macrophages was further supported by the finding that vaccination induced macrophage epigenetic alterations that modulated phagocytosis and the inflammatory response to infection. Together, these data show that this protein-free vaccine is a promising strategy to prevent deadly antimicrobial-resistant health care-associated infections.

PMID: 37792959

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