Short-and long-term immunogenicity and protection induced by non-replicating smallpox vaccine candidates in mice and comparison with the traditional 1st …

A Ferrier-Rembert, R Drillien, JN Tournier, D Garin… - Vaccine, 2008 - Elsevier
A Ferrier-Rembert, R Drillien, JN Tournier, D Garin, JM Crance
Vaccine, 2008Elsevier
This study assessed three non-replicating smallpox vaccine candidates (modified vaccinia
Ankara (MVA), NYVAC and HR) for their immunogenicity and ability to protect mice against
an intranasal cowpox virus challenge and compared them with the traditional replicating
vaccine. A single immunisation with the non-replicating vaccines induced a complete
protection from death at short-term, but was not fully protective when mice were challenged
150 days post-vaccination with protection correlated with the specific neutralizing antibodies …
This study assessed three non-replicating smallpox vaccine candidates (modified vaccinia Ankara (MVA), NYVAC and HR) for their immunogenicity and ability to protect mice against an intranasal cowpox virus challenge and compared them with the traditional replicating vaccine. A single immunisation with the non-replicating vaccines induced a complete protection from death at short-term, but was not fully protective when mice were challenged 150 days post-vaccination with protection correlated with the specific neutralizing antibodies and CD4+ T-cells responses. Prime-boost vaccination enabled effective long-term protection from death for mice vaccinated with MVA, but protection from disease and CD4+ T-cell level were lower than the ones induced by the traditional vaccine over the long-term period. Further investigations are necessary with MVA to determine the optimal conditions of immunisation to induce at long-term immunogenicity and protection observed with the 1st generation smallpox vaccine.
Elsevier