Tropical Diseases, Travel Medicine and Vaccines (Jun 2020)

Tetravalent dengue DNA vaccine is not immunogenic when delivered by retrograde infusion into salivary glands

  • Guy El Helou,
  • Todd A. Ponzio,
  • Joseph F. Goodman,
  • Maria Blevins,
  • David L. Caudell,
  • Kanakatte S. Raviprakash,
  • Daniel Ewing,
  • Maya Williams,
  • Kevin R. Porter,
  • John W. Sanders

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40794-020-00111-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 5

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction and background A tetravalent DNA vaccine for Dengue virus is under development but has not yet achieved optimal immunogenicity. Salivary glands vaccination has been reported efficacious in rodents and dogs. We report on a pilot study testing the salivary gland as a platform for a Dengue DNA vaccine in a non-human primate model. Materials and methods Four cynomolgus macaques were used in this study. Each macaque was pre-medicated with atropine and sedated with ketamine. Stensen’s duct papilla was cannulated with a P10 polyethylene tube, linked to a 500ul syringe. On the first two infusions, all macaques were infused with 300ul of TVDV mixed with 2 mg of zinc. For the 3rd infusion, to increase transfection into salivary tissue, two animals received 100uL TVDV mixed with 400uL polyethylenimine 1μg/ml (PEI) and the other two animals received 500uL TVDV with zinc. Antibody titers were assessed 4 weeks following the second and third infusion. Results and conclusions SGRI through Stensen’s duct is a well-tolerated, simple and easy to reproduce procedure. TVDV infused into macaques salivary glands elicited a significantly weaker antibody response than with different delivery methods.

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