Vaccines have probably made the single greatest contribution to human health in the last century and are still the most effective means of combating infectious diseases (
1). However, certain vaccines, notably whole-cell pertussis vaccines (Pw), have been associated with mild to serious side effects. Although Pw are effective at preventing whooping cough in infants, they can induce local and systemic reactions in a high proportion of immunized infants (
3,
5,
25). More significantly, convulsions and encephalopathy have been reported to be temporally associated with Pw administration (
2,
3,
5,
20). Concerns about safety have adversely affected vaccine uptake and have motivated the development of acellular pertussis vaccines (Pa), prepared with highly purified antigens from
Bordetella pertussis (
8,
9,
25). These new vaccines, which have considerably reduced side effects, have been introduced into routine pediatric vaccination programs in most developed countries. However, their merits over the traditional vaccines in terms of potency are still being debated (
5), and for reasons of cost and ease of production, Pw will continue to be used in most developing countries. Although it has been speculated that the reactogenicity of Pw may be related to residual active toxins (
3), the mechanisms whereby the vaccine mediates neurological effects have not been defined.
Evidence suggests that the systemic effects of local exposure to live or killed bacteria may be mediated through proinflammatory cytokine induction within the central nervous system (CNS). Specifically, interleukin-1β (IL-1β) has been implicated in the neurologic manifestations of infectious diseases such as bacterial meningitis (
17) and shigellosis (
40) and in the fever response evoked following administration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (
12). We have previously demonstrated that infection of mice with
B. pertussis (
14) or parenteral immunization with Pw (
13) results in the induction of IL-1β production in the hippocampus and hypothalamus. In the present investigation, we sought to address the hypothesis that neurological responses, specifically convulsive activity, induced by Pw but not by Pa, were mediated by IL-1β induced in the brain in response to active bacterial toxins present in Pw.
The lack of an appropriate animal model has restricted investigations into the mechanisms by which neurological reactions are induced by Pw. Although it had been reported that repeated injection of Pw and bovine serum albumin (BSA) induced encephalopathy in mice (
33), it was later demonstrated that the neurological responses observed resulted from the potentiating effect of pertussis toxin (PT) or LPS on anaphylaxis during sensitization to BSA (
22,
28). In this study we describe a novel murine model where neurological changes are consistently induced following parenteral administration of Pw. We report that exposure of mice to high ambient temperature following subcutaneous (s.c.) injection of Pw induces seizure-like behavioral changes, which are associated with a significant augmentation of IL-1β induction in the hippocampus. The seizure activity was reduced by pretreatment with an inhibitor of IL-1β-converting enzyme (ICE) and was significantly attenuated in IL-1 receptor type 1-defective (IL-1RI
−/−) mice. Increased IL-1β production and convulsive activity were also induced following parenteral injection of PT or LPS but was not observed following immunization with Pa. Our findings demonstrate that IL-1β, induced in the brain in response to active bacterial toxins residual in Pw, mediates certain neurological effects observed following immunization with Pw.
DISCUSSION
Respiratory infection of children with
B. pertussis has been associated with mild to severe neurological responses, including, fever, convulsions, and in a small but significant number of cases, encephalitis, encephalopathy, permanent brain damage, and death. Centrally controlled responses, including fevers and seizures, are also detected at a relatively high frequency following parenteral immunization with Pw, and although controversial, there is also evidence of the more severe CNS complications in a small proportion of vaccinated children (
2,
3,
5,
20). It has been suggested that active toxins, produced by the bacteria during infection or present in the Pw, may be responsible for the neurological responses (
3,
32); however, the mechanisms underlying these centrally controlled clinical manifestations of the infection and reactogenicity of the vaccine are poorly understood. The present report details a murine model in which neuronal responses were consistently induced by pertussis vaccination. The most significant and novel finding of our study is that certain neurological effects of pertussis whole-cell vaccines are mediated through the induction of IL-1β production in the brain in response to active bacterial toxins present in the vaccine.
Previous animal models designed to study the neurological responses to pertussis vaccine focused on an encephalopathic syndrome in mice generated by the administration of BSA and Pw (
33). However, data from a number of groups indicate that the protocol induced an acute anaphylactic reaction and did not cause an encephalopathy (
22,
28). The model was therefore deemed unsuitable for testing the encephalopathic potential of pertussis vaccines. In this study we sought to develop an alternative murine model, in which it was possible to consistently induce neurological responses to Pw. The majority of children displaying a seizure response to Pw have documented high temperatures. Indeed, a typical presentation of pertussis vaccine-induced encephalopathy is that of a generalized seizure frequently associated with a high fever within 48 h of pertussis vaccination (
2,
3). Furthermore, prophylactic acetaminophen administration reduces the frequency and severity of adverse reactions following primary vaccination with DTPw (
11). Therefore, our initial investigations focused on the fever response to vaccination in mice. We observed that core body temperatures were significantly elevated 2 to 4 h after injection of Pw. This was accompanied by an increase in the production of IL-1β in the hippocampus and hypothalamus, detectable at the protein and mRNA levels. This is consistent with the established role for IL-1β in the fever response to LPS and in gram-negative and other infections (
12,
30,
40).
Having demonstrated a temporal relationship between IL-1β and induction of fever, we hypothesized that there may also be a correlation between IL-1β and convulsive behavior induced by Pw vaccination, a hypothesis supported by an association between elevated IL-1β in the CNS and the pathogenesis of febrile convulsions in children (
10) and chemically induced seizures in mice (
4,
36,
40). Our rationale in establishing a model to study neurological responses to vaccination was to manipulate the early central response to Pw, by increasing core temperature and therefore exacerbating IL-1β production to a level that might induce seizure activity. We observed that placing the mice at high ambient temperature after injection of
B. pertussis sonicate or Pw induced behavioral changes ranging from head nodding to full clonic seizures.
Although there may be a number of possible mechanisms underlying the enhanced seizure-like activity following exposure of Pw-immunized mice to a high ambient temperature, our data indicate that it may reflect a synergistic effect of the heat stress response on IL-1β production. The convulsive activity was associated with IL-1β concentrations in the hippocampus which was significantly elevated compared with that in the mice injected with Pw and left at room temperature. Neurologic disorders, including seizures, have been described during cancer therapy with IL-1β (
29). Furthermore, elevated IL-1β has been linked with the seizure responses to glycerol (
4), pentylenetetrazole, and
Shigella dysenteriae (
40), and intrahippocampal administration of IL-1 receptor antagonist was found to inhibit electroencephalographic seizures induced by bicuculline methiodide in mice (
36). In the present study, definitive evidence of a role for IL-1β in the convulsive activity of Pw was provided by the demonstration that behavioral changes were significantly reduced by in vivo administration of an ICE inhibitor or in IL-1RI
−/−mice.
Although the stimulus for IL-1β induction in the brain following parenteral injection with Pw has not been definitively identified, our findings suggest a role for bacterial toxins. It has been reported that LPS and PT are present in Pw (
32). Indeed, we were able to detect these active toxins in the reference vaccine used for this study. Removal of active PT and LPS through deletion or mutations in the genes coding for these toxins (
16,
26) may provide safer Pw. However, we do not rule out a role for other active bacterial toxins or virulence factors in IL-1 induction and neurological effects of Pw. In contrast, Pa are prepared with highly purified
B. pertussis proteins, and although they include PT as a protective antigen in a chemically or genetically detoxified form, they are free of active bacterial toxins. Compared with Pw, these new vaccines are associated with significantly fewer adverse reactions, such as high fevers and convulsions (
3,
5,
8,
9). We observed that Pa did not induce IL-1β but did induce IL-10 production in the hippocampus of immunized mice. This is consistent with our observations that Pw selectively induce systemic Th1 cells and pro-inflammatory responses, whereas Pa or their purified components induce Th2 cells and anti-inflammatory cytokine production (
15,
18,
19,
21,
31). Significantly, these new generation Pa do not induce behavioral changes in mice. Direct evidence of the primary role of active bacterial toxins in inducing the effects of Pw was provided by our demonstration that PT or LPS given s.c. prior to exposure to 37°C induced convulsive behavior in mice. We have already reported that PT and LPS, like Pw, induce IL-1β production and c-Jun-N-terminal kinase (JNK) activation in the hippocampus (
13).
IL-1β and tumor necrosis factor alpha induction has been detected at the protein and mRNA levels in the hypothalamus and hippocampus of mice during infection with
B. pertussis (
14). Since the expression is more persistent in the brain than in the lungs or circulation, it was concluded that the production is induced locally in the brain, by either activated macrophages, bacterial toxins, or other mediators that have crossed the blood-brain barrier. Significantly, it has been suggested that PT may enhance histamine-induced vascular permeability (
39). The demonstration of antibodies to PT and filamentous hemagglutinin in the cerebrospinal fluid of a child with pertussis has been used as evidence to support the suggestion that pertussis antigens may gain entry to the CNS during infection (
7). It has also been reported that another AB toxin, cholera toxin, can be transported to the brain and can enhance trafficking of third party antigens to neural tissue following nasal delivery in mice (
35).
There are several possible pathways by which IL-1β can affect brain function. Some reports suggest that behavioral changes are mediated by cytokines produced in the periphery, which stimulate the CNS through afferent nerves (
38). However, there is increasing evidence that cytokines, including IL-1β, are synthesized by glial and neuronal cells during inflammation, suggesting a pathophysiological role for IL-1β in the brain (
30). In support of this, several studies have demonstrated that IL-1β can affect neuroendocrine functions and modulate release of neurotransmitters (
34,
37). To investigate the possibility that IL-1β, synthesized in the CNS in response to Pw, might alter neuronal excitability and therefore induce convulsive behavior, we demonstrated an inhibition of release of the neurotransmitters GABA and adenosine by hippocampal synaptosomes from Pw-treated mice. Modulation of these neurotransmitters has been reported during epilepsy and febrile convulsions in children (
27). A significant correlation was reported between seizure excitability and low concentrations of GABA in cerebrospinal fluid. It is possible that this decrease in inhibitory transmitter release occurs as a direct result of increased IL-1β in response to Pw vaccination. Indeed, it has been reported that IL-1β has the potential to exert an inhibitory effect on neurotransmitter release and synaptic plasticity (
23,
37).
Although we do not rule out a role for other inflammatory mediators, including tumor necrosis factor alpha or IL-6, our results demonstrate that the neurological response to Pw is dependent on the central production of IL-1β, which may exert its effect via the modulation of inhibitory neurotransmission. To our knowledge, this is the first time a causal relationship between Pw vaccination and neuronal responses has been demonstrated in an animal model. Our findings provide the first direct evidence of a mechanism of pertussis vaccine reactogenicity and suggest that active bacterial toxins are responsible for the neurologic reactions observed in children immunized with Pw.