Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Jan 2024)
Adenoviruses vectored hepatitis C virus vaccine cocktails induce broadly specific immune responses against multi-genotypic HCV in mice
Abstract
Background: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) vaccines are an urgent need to prevent hepatitis C and its further progression of hepatocellular carcinoma. Since the promising T cell based chimpanzee adenovirus and modified vaccinia virus Ankara vectorial HCV vaccines were failed in clinical phase II trial, the vaccine designs to improve protection efficacy in combination of cellular and humoral immunity have been hypothesized against multi-genotypic HCV. Methods: Eight HCV vaccine strains were constructed with two novel adenovirus vectors (Sad23L and Ad49L) encoding E1E2 or NS3–5B proteins of HCV genotype (Gt) 1b and 6a isolates, covering 80 % HCV strains prevalent in south China and south-east Asia. Eight HCV vaccine strains were grouped into Sad23L-based vaccine cocktail-1 and Ad49L-based vaccine cocktail-2 for vaccinating mice, respectively. Results: The immunogenicity of a single dose of 107-1010 PFU HCV individual vaccines was evaluated in mice, showing weak specific antibody to E1 and E2 protein but a dose-dependent T cell response to E1E2/NS3–5B peptides, which could be significantly enhanced by boosting with an alternative vector vaccine carrying homologous antigen. Prime-boost vaccinations with vaccine cocktail-1 and cocktail-2 induced significantly higher cross-reactive antibody and stronger T cell responses to HCV Gt-1b/6a. The high frequency of intrasplenic and intrahepatic NS31629–1637 CD8+ T cell responses were identified, in which the high proportion of TRM and TEM cells might play an important role against HCV infection in liver. Conclusions: Prime-boost regimens with HCV vaccine cocktails elicited the broad cross-reactive antibody and robust T cell responses against multi-genotypic HCV in mice.