1. Functional Aspects of Intrahepatic Hepatitis B Virus-specific T Cells Induced by Therapeutic DNA Vaccination
- Author
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Anette Brass, Gustaf Ahlén, David R. Milich, Matti Sällberg, and Lars Frelin
- Subjects
Hepatitis B virus ,T-Lymphocytes ,Gene Expression ,Mice, Transgenic ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,DNA vaccination ,Mice ,Hepatitis B, Chronic ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Vaccines, DNA ,Genetics ,Animals ,Humans ,Hepatitis B Vaccines ,Hepatitis B e Antigens ,Hepatitis B Antibodies ,Molecular Biology ,Cell Proliferation ,Pharmacology ,Vaccination ,virus diseases ,Hepatitis B ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Hepatitis B Core Antigens ,Interleukin-12 ,digestive system diseases ,HBcAg ,Electroporation ,HBeAg ,Viral replication ,Liver ,Immunology ,Interleukin 12 ,Hepatocytes ,Molecular Medicine ,Original Article ,Plasmids - Abstract
Current therapies for the hepatitis B virus (HBV), a major cause of severe liver disease, suppress viral replication but replication rebounds if therapy is withdrawn. It is widely accepted that immune activation is needed to control replication off-therapy. To specifically activate T cells crossreactive between the hepatitis B core and e antigens (HBcAg/HBeAg) in chronically infected patients, we developed a therapeutic vaccine candidate. The vaccine encompass codon-optimized HBcAg and IL-12 expressing plasmids delivered using targeted high-pressure injection combined with in vivo electroporation. One dose of the vaccine primed a B-cell-independent polyfunctional T-cell response, in wild-type, and in HBeAg-transgenic mice with an impaired ability to respond to HBc/eAg. The response peaked at 2 weeks and contracted at week 6 after vaccination. Coadministration of IL-12 improved antibody levels, and T-cell expansion and functionality. The vaccine primed T cells that, 2 weeks after a single dose, cleared hepatocytes transiently expressing HBcAg in vaccinated wild-type and HBeAg-transgenic mice. However, 4 weeks later, these functional responses were lost. Booster doses after 8–12 weeks effectively restored function and expansion of the rapidly contracting T cells. Thus, this vaccine strategy primes functional HBcAg-specific T cells in a host with dysfunctional response to HBV.
- Published
- 2015
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