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Optimized Mucosal MVA Prime/ Soluble gp120 Boost Vaccination Regimen Induces Similar Antibody Responses as an Intramuscular Regimen

Authors :
Massimo Maddaloni
David J. Pickup
David W. Pascual
Dorothy I. Jones
Herman F. Staats
Sallie R. Permar
Celia C. LaBranche
David C. Montefiori
Brandi T. Johnson-Weaver
Justin Pollara
Soman N. Abraham
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

The benefits of mucosal vaccines over injected vaccines are difficult to ascertain since mucosally administered vaccines often induce serum antibody responses of lower magnitude than those induced by injected vaccines. This study aimed to determine if mucosal vaccination using a modified vaccinia Ankara expressing HIV-1 gp120 (MVA-g120) prime and HIV-1 gp120 protein boost could be optimized to induce serum antibody responses similar to those induced by an intramuscularly (IM) administered MVA prime/gp120 boost to allow comparison of an IM immunization regimen to a mucosal vaccination regimen for their ability to protect against a low dose rectal SHIV challenge while inducing similar serum anti-HIV-1 antibody responses. A 3-fold higher antigen dose was required for intranasal (IN) immunization with gp120 to induce serum anti-gp120 IgG responses not significantly different than those induced by IM immunization. Gp120 fused to the Adenovirus type 2 fiber binding domain (gp120-Ad2F), a mucosal targeting ligand, exhibited enhanced IN immunogenicity when compared to gp120 alone. MVA-gp120 was more immunogenic after IN delivery than gastric or rectal delivery, although serum antibodies induced by IN immunization were lower than those induced by intramuscular immunization. Using these optimized vaccines, an IN MVA-gp120 prime, combined IM (gp120) and IN (gp120-Ad2F) boost regimen (IN/IM+IN) induced serum anti-gp120 antibody titers similar to those induced by the intramuscular prime/boost regimen (IM/IM) in rabbits and non-human primates. Despite the induction of similar systemic anti-HIV-1 antibody responses, neither the IM/IM nor the IN/IM+IN regimen induced elevated anti-HIV-1 mucosal IgA responses nor protected against a repeated low-dose rectal SHIV challenge. These results demonstrate that immunization regimens utilizing the IN route are able to induce serum antigen-specific antibody responses similar to those induced by systemic immunizationIMPORTANCEMucosal vaccination is proposed as a method of immunization able to induce protection against mucosal pathogens that is superior to protection provided by parenteral immunization. However, mucosal vaccination often induces serum antigen-specific immune responses of lower magnitude than those induced by parenteral immunization, making the comparison of mucosal and parenteral immunization difficult. We identified vaccine parameters that allowed an immunization regimen consisting of an IN prime followed with boosters administered by both IN and IM routes to induce serum antibody responses similar to those induced by IM prime/boost vaccination. Additional studies are needed to determine the potential benefit of mucosal immunization for HIV-1 and other mucosally-transmitted pathogens.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5ba5e09d5910fbac82fd91b8adb8dc98
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/573394