EBioMedicine (Apr 2017)

Mucosal Vaccination with Heterologous Viral Vectored Vaccine Targeting Subdominant SIV Accessory Antigens Strongly Inhibits Early Viral Replication

  • Huanbin Xu,
  • Anne-Marie Andersson,
  • Emeline Ragonnaud,
  • Ditte Boilesen,
  • Anders Tolver,
  • Benjamin Anderschou Holbech Jensen,
  • James L. Blanchard,
  • Alfredo Nicosia,
  • Antonella Folgori,
  • Stefano Colloca,
  • Riccardo Cortese,
  • Allan Randrup Thomsen,
  • Jan Pravsgaard Christensen,
  • Ronald S. Veazey,
  • Peter Johannes Holst

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2017.03.003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. C
pp. 204 – 215

Abstract

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Conventional HIV T cell vaccine strategies have not been successful in containing acute peak viremia, nor in providing long-term control. We immunized rhesus macaques intramuscularly and rectally using a heterologous adenovirus vectored SIV vaccine regimen encoding normally weakly immunogenic tat, vif, rev and vpr antigens fused to the MHC class II associated invariant chain. Immunizations induced broad T cell responses in all vaccinees. Following up to 10 repeated low-dose intrarectal challenges, vaccinees suppressed early viral replication (P = 0.01) and prevented the peak viremia in 5/6 animals. Despite consistently undetectable viremia in 2 out of 6 vaccinees, all animals showed evidence of infection induced immune responses indicating that infection had taken place. Vaccinees, with and without detectable viremia better preserved their rectal CD4+ T cell population and had reduced immune hyperactivation as measured by naïve T cell depletion, Ki-67 and PD-1 expression on T cells. These results indicate that vaccination towards SIV accessory antigens vaccine can provide a level of acute control of SIV replication with a suggestion of beneficial immunological consequences in infected animals of unknown long-term significance. In conclusion, our studies demonstrate that a vaccine encoding subdominant antigens not normally associated with virus control can exert a significant impact on acute peak viremia.

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