PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Immunomodulator-based enhancement of anti smallpox immune responses.

  • Osmarie Martínez,
  • Eric Miranda,
  • Maite Ramírez,
  • Saritza Santos,
  • Carlos Rivera,
  • Luis Vázquez,
  • Tomás Sánchez,
  • Raymond L Tremblay,
  • Eddy Ríos-Olivares,
  • Miguel Otero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0123113
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
p. e0123113

Abstract

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BACKGROUND:The current live vaccinia virus vaccine used in the prevention of smallpox is contraindicated for millions of immune-compromised individuals. Although vaccination with the current smallpox vaccine produces protective immunity, it might result in mild to serious health complications for some vaccinees. Thus, there is a critical need for the production of a safe virus-free vaccine against smallpox that is available to everyone. For that reason, we investigated the impact of imiquimod and resiquimod (Toll-like receptors agonists), and the codon-usage optimization of the vaccinia virus A27L gene in the enhancement of the immune response, with intent of producing a safe, virus-free DNA vaccine coding for the A27 vaccinia virus protein. METHODS:We analyzed the cellular-immune response by measuring the IFN-γ production of splenocytes by ELISPOT, the humoral-immune responses measuring total IgG and IgG2a/IgG1 ratios by ELISA, and the TH1 and TH2 cytokine profiles by ELISA, in mice immunized with our vaccine formulation. RESULTS:The proposed vaccine formulation enhanced the A27L vaccine-mediated production of IFN-γ on mouse spleens, and increased the humoral immunity with a TH1-biased response. Also, our vaccine induced a TH1 cytokine milieu, which is important against viral infections. CONCLUSION:These results support the efforts to find a new mechanism to enhance an immune response against smallpox, through the implementation of a safe, virus-free DNA vaccination platform.