Significant abundance of bacterial flagellin and expression of its surface localized receptor toll-like receptor 5 and cytokine interleukin-22 in South African infants with poor oral rotavirus vaccine take

Nontlantla J. Haindongo, Mapaseka Seheri, Cliff A. Magwira*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Bacterial flagellin, a potent intestinal innate immune activator, prevents murine rotavirus (RV) infection independent of adaptive immunity and interferons. The flagellin-induced immunity is mediated by Toll-like receptor (TLR5) and Nod-like receptor C4 (NLRC4), which elicit the production of interleukins 22 (IL-22) and IL-18, respectively. Here, we assessed whether a high abundance of flagellin at the time of vaccination would negatively affect the oral RV vaccine take. Fecal samples were collected from infants a week after first dose of Rotarix vaccination to establish vaccine shedders (n = 50) and non-shedders (n = 44). The abundance of flagellin and expression of flagellin-encoding fliC, TLR5 and NLRC4, IL-22 and IL-18 genes was determined by qPCR. There were no differences in the abundance of flagellin between vaccine shedders and non-shedders (p = 0.15). However, the expression of FliC was increased 7.5-fold in non-shedders versus shedders (p = 0.001). Similarly, TLR5 (p = 0.045), and not NLRC4 (p = 0.507,) was significantly expressed in non-shedders versus shedders. The expression of IL-22 (p = 0.054), and not IL-18 dependent NLRC4 (p = 0.650), was increased 3.4-fold in non-shedders versus shedders. Collectively, our observations suggest a possible negative impact of the abundance of viable flagellated bacteria at the time of vaccination on the replication and therefore the performance of RV vaccines.

Original languageEnglish
Article number3
JournalGut Pathogens
Volume17
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2025

Keywords

  • Bacterial flagellin
  • Interleukin-22
  • Nod-like receptor C4
  • Rotavirus vaccine
  • Shedding
  • Toll-like receptor 5

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