Comparison of Immunogenicity in Rhesus Macaques of Transmitted-Founder, HIV-1 Group M Consensus, and Trivalent Mosaic Envelope Vaccines Formulated as a DNA Prime, NYVAC, and Envelope Protein Boost.


Autoria(s): Hulot S.L.; Korber B.; Giorgi E.E.; Vandergrift N.; Saunders K.O.; Balachandran H.; Mach L.V.; Lifton M.A.; Pantaleo G.; Tartaglia J.; Phogat S.; Jacobs B.; Kibler K.; Perdiguero B.; Gomez C.E.; Esteban M.; Rosati M.; Felber B.K.; Pavlakis G.N.; Parks R.; Lloyd K.; Sutherland L.; Scearce R.; Letvin N.L.; Seaman M.S.; Alam S.M.; Montefiori D.; Liao H.X.; Haynes B.F.; Santra S.
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

An effective human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vaccine must induce protective antibody responses, as well as CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell responses, that can be effective despite extraordinary diversity of HIV-1. The consensus and mosaic immunogens are complete but artificial proteins, computationally designed to elicit immune responses with improved cross-reactive breadth, to attempt to overcome the challenge of global HIV diversity. In this study, we have compared the immunogenicity of a transmitted-founder (T/F) B clade Env (B.1059), a global group M consensus Env (Con-S), and a global trivalent mosaic Env protein in rhesus macaques. These antigens were delivered using a DNA prime-recombinant NYVAC (rNYVAC) vector and Env protein boost vaccination strategy. While Con-S Env was a single sequence, mosaic immunogens were a set of three Envs optimized to include the most common forms of potential T cell epitopes. Both Con-S and mosaic sequences retained common amino acids encompassed by both antibody and T cell epitopes and were central to globally circulating strains. Mosaics and Con-S Envs expressed as full-length proteins bound well to a number of neutralizing antibodies with discontinuous epitopes. Also, both consensus and mosaic immunogens induced significantly higher gamma interferon (IFN-γ) enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot assay (ELISpot) responses than B.1059 immunogen. Immunization with these proteins, particularly Con-S, also induced significantly higher neutralizing antibodies to viruses than B.1059 Env, primarily to tier 1 viruses. Both Con-S and mosaics stimulated more potent CD8-T cell responses against heterologous Envs than did B.1059. Both antibody and cellular data from this study strengthen the concept of using in silico-designed centralized immunogens for global HIV-1 vaccine development strategies. IMPORTANCE: There is an increasing appreciation for the importance of vaccine-induced anti-Env antibody responses for preventing HIV-1 acquisition. This nonhuman primate study demonstrates that in silico-designed global HIV-1 immunogens, designed for a human clinical trial, are capable of eliciting not only T lymphocyte responses but also potent anti-Env antibody responses.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_9ABE1A5A8729

isbn:1098-5514 (Electronic)

pmid:25855741

doi:10.1128/JVI.00383-15

isiid:000354657900028

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Journal of Virology, vol. 89, no. 12, pp. 6462-6480

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article