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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, Jul 1996, 451-455, Vol 3, No. 4
D Cohen, N Orr, G Robin, R Slepon, S Ashkenazi, I Ashkenazi and J Shemer
The purpose of the present study was to explore the possibility of
detecting antibodies to Shigella sonnei lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in urine
after infection or vaccination. Urinary immunoglobulin A (IgA) and IgG
antibodies and specific IgA secretory protein against S. sonnei LPS were
measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), after adjustment for
urine concentration. A significant antibody level was defined as one above
a cutoff value calculated from the geometric mean + 2 standard deviations
of urinary anti-S. sonnei LPS levels in 43 healthy hepatitis B vaccinees
(controls). Of 11 culture-proven cases of S. sonnei shigellosis, at
convalescence 9 (82%) had significantly elevated levels of urinary
antibodies to the homologous LPS. The S. sonnei conjugate vaccine, composed
of S. sonnei O-specific polysaccharide covalently bound to recombinant
exoprotein A of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, elicited a significant urine IgA or
IgG anti- LPS response in 60% (6 of 10), 56% (9 of 16) 43% (16 of 37), and
14% (3 of 21) of the volunteers at 2 weeks, 6 weeks, 6 months, and 12
months after vaccination, respectively. The specificity of the urine
antibody response to S. sonnei LPS was documented by the total lack of
response in subjects who received parenteral Shigella flexneri
2a-recombinant exoprotein A conjugate (69 urine samples) or meningoccal
tetravalent control vaccines (4 urine samples). All the volunteers who
lacked a significant response to S. sonnei LPS in serum also lacked such
response in urine samples. Seventy-four percent of the volunteers with a
significant IgA or IgG anti-LPS response in serum at convalescence or 14
days after vaccination showed a similar response in urine. The ratio of the
titer of secretory protein bound to IgA anti-S. sonnei LPS in urine to that
in serum was 303 times higher than the ratio of anti-S. sonnei LPS total
IgA titer in urine to that in serum, indicating that the urine IgA is of
secretory origin. These findings suggest the possible use of urinary
Shigella LPS antibodies as markers of systemic and secretory immune
responses after natural infection or vaccination. At this stage, because of
its limited sensitivity, the detection by ELISA of Shigella LPS antibodies
in urine cannot replace the same assay in serum as a definitive test in an
individual with a negative result.
Copyright © 1996 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Detection of antibodies to Shigella lipopolysaccharide in urine after natural Shigella infection or vaccination
Medical Corps, Israel Defence Force, Israel.
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