Back to Search Start Over

Evaluation in macaques of HIV-1 DNA vaccines containing primate CpG motifs and fowlpoxvirus vaccines co-expressing IFNgamma or IL-12

Authors :
Scott Thomson
Sean Emery
C. Jane Dale
Desmond W. Cooper
David B. Boyle
Damian F. J. Purcell
Alistair J. Ramsay
Matthew Law
Rosemary A. Ffrench
Ian A. Ramshaw
Barbara E.H. Coupar
Robert De Rose
Stephen J. Kent
Kim Wilson
Hayley A Croom
Source :
Vaccine. 23(2)
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Induction of HIV-specific T-cell responses by vaccines may facilitate efficient control of HIV. Plasmid DNA vaccines and recombinant fowlpoxvirus (rFPV) vaccines are promising HIV-1 vaccine candidates, although either vaccine alone may be insufficient to protect against HIV-1. A consecutive immunisation strategy involving priming with DNA and boosting with rFPV vaccines encoding multiple common HIV-1 antigens was further evaluated in 30 macaques. The DNA vaccine vector included CpG immunostimulatory molecules, and rFPV vaccines were compared with rFPV vaccines co-expressing the pro-T cell cytokines IFNgamma or IL-12. Vaccines expressed multiple HIV-1 genes, mutated to remove active sites of the HIV proteins. The vaccines were well tolerated, and a significant enhancement of DNA-vaccine primed HIV-1 specific T lymphocyte responses was observed following rFPV boosting. Co-expression of IFNgamma or IL-12 by the rFPV vaccines did not further enhance immune responses. Non-sterilising protection from a non-pathogenic HIV-1 challenge was observed. This study provides evidence of a safe, optimised, strategy for the generation of T-cell mediated immunity to HIV-1.

Details

ISSN :
0264410X
Volume :
23
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Vaccine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b857372fde5cb1d575efcc1799c06366