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Mucosal vaccine efficacy against intrarectal SHIV is independent of anti-Env antibody response

Authors :
John D. Clements
David Venzon
Thomas Musich
Dennis M. Klinman
Robert C. Waters
Blake Frey
Timothy R. Fouts
Yichuan Wang
James Talton
George K. Lewis
Jay A. Berzofsky
Giorgio Trinchieri
Kurt Berckmueller
Yongjun Sui
Genoveffa Franchini
Venkatramanan Mohanram
Amiran Dzutsev
James F. Kirk
Anthony L. DeVico
Diego A. Vargas-Inchaustegui
Georgia D. Tomaras
Xiaoying Shen
Robert C. Gallo
Marjorie Robert-Guroff
Source :
The Journal of clinical investigation. 129(3)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

It is widely believed that protection against acquisition of HIV or SIV infection requires anti-envelope (anti-Env) antibodies, and that cellular immunity may affect viral loads but not acquisition, except in special cases. Here we provide evidence to the contrary. Mucosal immunization may enhance HIV vaccine efficacy by eliciting protective responses at portals of exposure. Accordingly, we vaccinated macaques mucosally with HIV/SIV peptides, modified vaccinia Ankara–SIV (MVA-SIV), and HIV-gp120–CD4 fusion protein plus adjuvants, which consistently reduced infection risk against heterologous intrarectal SHIV(SF162P4) challenge, both high dose and repeated low dose. Surprisingly, vaccinated animals exhibited no anti-gp120 humoral responses above background and Gag- and Env-specific T cells were induced but failed to correlate with viral acquisition. Instead, vaccine-induced gut microbiome alteration and myeloid cell accumulation in colorectal mucosa correlated with protection. Ex vivo stimulation of the myeloid cell–enriched population with SHIV led to enhanced production of trained immunity markers TNF-α and IL-6, as well as viral coreceptor agonist MIP1α, which correlated with reduced viral Gag expression and in vivo viral acquisition. Overall, our results suggest mechanisms involving trained innate mucosal immunity together with antigen-specific T cells, and also indicate that vaccines can have critical effects on the gut microbiome, which in turn can affect resistance to infection. Strategies to elicit similar responses may be considered for vaccine designs to achieve optimal protective efficacy.

Details

ISSN :
15588238
Volume :
129
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a12c61cb4536cddc7e43e78d02af92ca