We describe an alternative approach to the enumeration of mycobacteria in vitro, which uses reporter-gene tagged mycobacteria instead of colony-forming units (CFU). “Survival” of organisms as well as host response-markers are measured simultaneously, providing a low-cost, versatile and functional system for studies of host/pathogen interactions in the context of tuberculosis.
Functional assays have long played a key role in measuring of immunogenicity of a given vaccine. This is conventionally expressed as serum bactericidal titers. Studies of serum bactericidal titers in response to childhood vaccines have enabled us to develop and validate cut-off levels for protective immune responses and such cut-offs are in routine use. No such assays have been taken forward into the routine assessment of vaccines that induce primarily cell-mediated immunity in the form of effector T cell responses, such as TB vaccines. In the animal model, the performance of a given vaccine candidate is routinely evaluated in standardized bactericidal assays, and all current novel TB-vaccine candidates have been subjected to this step in their evaluation prior to phase 1 human trials. The assessment of immunogenicity and therefore likelihood of protective efficacy of novel anti-TB vaccines should ideally undergo a similar step-wise evaluation in the human models now, including measurements in bactericidal assays.
Bactericidal assays in the context of tuberculosis vaccine research are already well established in the animal models, where they are applied to screen potentially promising vaccine candidates. Reduction of bacterial load in various organs functions as the main read-out of immunogenicity. However, no such assays have been incorporated into clinical trials for novel anti-TB vaccines to date.
Although there is still uncertainty about the exact mechanisms that lead to killing of mycobacteria inside human macrophages, the interaction of macrophages and T cells with mycobacteria is clearly required. The assay described in this paper represents a novel generation of bactericidal assays that enables studies of such key cellular components with all other cellular and humoral factors present in whole blood without making assumptions about their relative individual contribution. The assay described by our group uses small volumes of whole blood and has already been employed in studies of adults and children in TB-endemic settings. We have shown immunogenicity of the BCG vaccine, increased growth of mycobacteria in HIV-positive patients, as well as the effect of anti-retroviral therapy and Vitamin D on mycobacterial survival in vitro. Here we summarise the methodology, and present our reproducibility data using this relatively simple, low-cost and field-friendly model.
Note: Definitions/Abbreviations
BCG lux = M. bovis BCG, Montreal strain, transformed with shuttle plasmid pSMT1 carrying the luxAB genes from Vibrio harveyi, under the control of the mycobacterial GroEL (hsp60) promoter.
CFU = Colony Forming Unit (a measure of mycobacterial viability).
1. Preparation of BCG lux reporter mycobacteria stock
2. Determining stock RLU/CFU correlation and contents of aliquots
3. Preparation of BCG lux culture for inoculation into whole blood
4. Preparation of whole blood
5. Measuring luminescence (at 0hr and 96hrs)
6. Representative results:
It is important to use bacteria in logarithmic phase of growth for the whole blood lux assays, i.e. grown over 48-72 hours prior to inoculating the samples, as metabolic activity is suboptimal if either straight out of the freezer or in stationary phase. The prior growth should be standardized for a series of experiments to either 48 or 72 hours to avoid variability. Figure 1 shows the growth curve of a representative culture of BCG lux. The doubling time is about 24 hours until stationary phase is reached.
Figure 1. Representative growth curve of BCG lux over 96 hours in 7H9 medium and correlation of RLU and CFU.
Although RLU values always correlate with CFU, the number of RLU corresponding to a single CFU can vary depending on the stock, which is why it is good practice to use the same frozen stock throughout a series of experiments to guarantee a consistent multiplicity of infection (MOI).
Table 1 shows an example of raw date at time of inoculation (T0) and at 96 hours. The growth ratios are calculated using the formula T96/T0, but other time intervals can of course also be measured. It is, however, advisable not to use the cultures beyond 96 hours, as significant cell death occurs.
Table 1. Example of raw data at time of inoculation (T0) and at 96 hours (T96) and calculated growth ratios from 3 adult donors.
Depending on the available antigen-specific memory responses and possibly also neutrophil count, growth ratios vary among individuals, as shown here in Figure 2 in the blood of children with and without HIV-infection. On average, young children have higher growth ratios than adults, Tuberculin skin test (TST) +ve individuals have lower growth ratios than TST-ve individuals, and HIV-infected patients have high growth ratios due to the deficiency of CD4 T cell population, one of the key mediators of cellular immune responses to mycobacteria.
Figure 2. Inter-donor variability: Growth ratios of T0 versus 96 hours for a set of patients, depending on underlying HIV status.
Reproducibility of growth ratios over a period of time is shown in Figure 3, which summarises results from 64 donors bled twice over a period of 12 months and from a single donor bled repeatedly for control experiments. Potential causes of variability could be changes in mycobacterial sensitization or variability within levels of host cytokines, as observed in many bioassays.
Figure 3. (a) Single donor on 12 occasions over 12 months. (b) multiple (64) donors on 2 occasions over 12 months.
Bactericidal assays in the context of tuberculosis vaccine research are well established in animal models, where they are applied to screen potentially promising vaccine candidates. Reduction of bacterial load in various organs functions as the main read-out of immunogenicity.
The first generation of human bactericidal assays were designed using macrophages alone, infected with M. tuberculosis. CFU served as the main read-out of mycobacterial survival after a minimum time of 3 weeks. These assays relied on preparation of PBMC, adherent monocytes/macrophages and lysis at given time points1,2.
As our understanding of the more complex interactions between macrophages and T cells to contain M. tuberculosis evolved, and the separation of various cell populations using magnetic beads was now possible, these systems were modified by adding T cells back into the assays and measuring CFU3,4,5. Some of these assays have used live M. tuberculosis, but one of the main impediments of work with M. tuberculosis in bactericidal assays is the need for containment facilities and the fact that CFU are only available after 3 weeks of culture. In addition, PBMC-based assays require a large amount of blood and still rely on CFU as read-out, which takes 3 weeks.
To facilitate more rapid read-outs, based on metabolic activity, new assays were designed. In these assays, metabolic activity is measured as a correlate of viable mycobacterial and three different systems have been designed in the last 10 years using either uracil incorporation4,5, reporter-gene tagged mycobacteria6-11 or a radiometric detection system via BacTec/MDGIT bottles7,8.
The whole blood lux assay is the only assay to date that has been successfully transferred to TB-endemic settings and used in children9,10. Furthermore, no other assay has published data of intra-donor variability over a period of time.
A limitation of the lux assay is its reliance on genetically modified organisms and the need to culture the organism prior to inoculation. However, due to the exact quantification of organisms, it is possible to calculate a very accurate multiplicity of infection for each series of experiments and each batch, which aids comparability and reproducibility. Instructions need to be followed closely in the preparation of the strains to achieve good viability of stocks, which is essential for successful implementation of the assay. Since the assay is carried out on fresh blood, it is time-sensitive and storage of samples in the field is not possible. Ideally, the blood needs to reach the laboratory within 4 hours. It might be possible in the future to further reduce the volume of blood required, and our laboratory is currently working on this.
Given the low cost and applicability to small samples, it is technically feasible to integrate this assay into clinical trials of novel TB vaccines10 or anti-TB interventions11. This would provide an additional opportunity to assess not just the host response to the vaccine, as is the current practice using an array of immunological and molecular techniques (such as flow cytometry, ELISPOT and microarray), but to add the functional read out of mycobacterial survival following host-pathogen interaction. This is common practice for vaccine assessments in pre-clinical studies in the animal model or by using bactericidal assays based on serum inhibition for other infections not relying on cellular immune responses.
It is timely to apply this approach to novel TB vaccines.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was funded by personal fellowships from the Wellcome Trust to Beate Kampmann (056608, GRO77273).
Reagent | Company | Cat No |
BCG lux | Various | n/a |
Middlebrook 7H11 agar | Becton Dickinson | 283810 |
Middlebrook 7H9 broth | BD Biosciences | 271310 (500g) |
Middlebrook ADC enrichment | BD Biosciences | 212352 |
Middlebrook OADC supplement | Becton Dickinson | 212240 |
Tween 80 | Sigma Aldrich | 274364 |
Glycerol | Sigma Aldrich | G5150 |
Hygromycin B | Roche | 10843555001 (20ml) |
N-decyl aldehyde | Sigma | D7384-100G |
Ethanol (>99.7%) | VWR | 101077 |
Sterile PBS | In House | n/a |
RPMI-1640 with L-Glutamine, 25mM HEPES | Sigma | R0883 |
Sterile distilled Water | In House | n/a |
Equipment | ||
Tube luminometer (injectable port mandatory) | Berthold AutoLumat LB953 or single-tube luminometer Sirius | |
Luminometer tubes, 12 x 75mm, pyrex rimless | Corning from VWR | 99445-12 |
Erlenmeyer flasks with vented caps, sterile polycarbonate 250ml | Corning via Fisher Scientific | 2150329 |
BD Vacutainer Blood Collection Tubes (preservative-free heparin) | BD | 367676 |
50ml Falcon tubes, conical | BD | 352077 |
7ml Sterilin specimen polypropylene bijou tubes | VWR | 99445-12 |
Sterilin Universal containers (30 ml) | Laboratory Analysis LTD | 128C |
Glass beads 2mm diameter | SigmaAldrich | Z143928 |
10ml pipettes and pipette boy | any | |
1000μl and 200μl pipettes and filter tips | any | |
General laboratory equipment: | ||
Class II safety cabinet cabinet | ||
Refrigerator (4°C) | ||
Centrifuge | ||
Rocking shaker platform (1800) to mix tubes | ||
Orbital Shaker incubator set at 37°C for growing up bacterial cultures |