PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Altered response hierarchy and increased T-cell breadth upon HIV-1 conserved element DNA vaccination in macaques.

  • Viraj Kulkarni,
  • Antonio Valentin,
  • Margherita Rosati,
  • Candido Alicea,
  • Ashish K Singh,
  • Rashmi Jalah,
  • Kate E Broderick,
  • Niranjan Y Sardesai,
  • Sylvie Le Gall,
  • Beatriz Mothe,
  • Christian Brander,
  • Morgane Rolland,
  • James I Mullins,
  • George N Pavlakis,
  • Barbara K Felber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0086254
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. e86254

Abstract

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HIV sequence diversity and potential decoy epitopes are hurdles in the development of an effective AIDS vaccine. A DNA vaccine candidate comprising of highly conserved p24(gag) elements (CE) induced robust immunity in all 10 vaccinated macaques, whereas full-length gag DNA vaccination elicited responses to these conserved elements in only 5 of 11 animals, targeting fewer CE per animal. Importantly, boosting CE-primed macaques with DNA expressing full-length p55(gag) increased both magnitude of CE responses and breadth of Gag immunity, demonstrating alteration of the hierarchy of epitope recognition in the presence of pre-existing CE-specific responses. Inclusion of a conserved element immunogen provides a novel and effective strategy to broaden responses against highly diverse pathogens by avoiding decoy epitopes, while focusing responses to critical viral elements for which few escape pathways exist.