International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Apr 2023)

Preclinical Evaluation of TB/FLU-04L—An Intranasal Influenza Vector-Based Boost Vaccine against Tuberculosis

  • Anna-Polina Shurygina,
  • Natalia Zabolotnykh,
  • Tatiana Vinogradova,
  • Berik Khairullin,
  • Markhabat Kassenov,
  • Ainur Nurpeisova,
  • Gulbanu Sarsenbayeva,
  • Abylai Sansyzbay,
  • Kirill Vasilyev,
  • Janna Buzitskaya,
  • Andrey Egorov,
  • Marina Stukova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24087439
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 8
p. 7439

Abstract

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Tuberculosis is a major global threat to human health. Since the widely used BCG vaccine is poorly effective in adults, there is a demand for the development of a new type of boost tuberculosis vaccine. We designed a novel intranasal tuberculosis vaccine candidate, TB/FLU-04L, which is based on an attenuated influenza A virus vector encoding two mycobacterium antigens, Ag85A and ESAT-6. As tuberculosis is an airborne disease, the ability to induce mucosal immunity is one of the potential advantages of influenza vectors. Sequences of ESAT-6 and Ag85A antigens were inserted into the NS1 open reading frame of the influenza A virus to replace the deleted carboxyl part of the NS1 protein. The vector expressing chimeric NS1 protein appeared to be genetically stable and replication-deficient in mice and non-human primates. Intranasal immunization of C57BL/6 mice or cynomolgus macaques with the TB/FLU-04L vaccine candidate induced Mtb-specific Th1 immune response. Single TB/FLU-04L immunization in mice showed commensurate levels of protection in comparison to BCG and significantly increased the protective effect of BCG when applied in a “prime-boost” scheme. Our findings show that intranasal immunization with the TB/FLU-04L vaccine, which carries two mycobacterium antigens, is safe, and induces a protective immune response against virulent M. tuberculosis.

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