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Aerosolized Ebola vaccine protects primates and elicits lung-resident T cell responses
Michelle Meyer, … , Peter L. Collins, Alexander Bukreyev
Michelle Meyer, … , Peter L. Collins, Alexander Bukreyev
Published July 13, 2015
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2015;125(8):3241-3255. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI81532.
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Research Article

Aerosolized Ebola vaccine protects primates and elicits lung-resident T cell responses

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Abstract

Direct delivery of aerosolized vaccines to the respiratory mucosa elicits both systemic and mucosal responses. This vaccine strategy has not been tested for Ebola virus (EBOV) or other hemorrhagic fever viruses. Here, we examined the immunogenicity and protective efficacy of an aerosolized human parainfluenza virus type 3–vectored vaccine that expresses the glycoprotein (GP) of EBOV (HPIV3/EboGP) delivered to the respiratory tract. Rhesus macaques were vaccinated with aerosolized HPIV3/EboGP, liquid HPIV3/EboGP, or an unrelated, intramuscular, Venezuelan equine encephalitis replicon vaccine expressing EBOV GP. Serum and mucosal samples from aerosolized HPIV3/EboGP recipients exhibited high EBOV-specific IgG, IgA, and neutralizing antibody titers, which exceeded or equaled titers observed in liquid recipients. The HPIV3/EboGP vaccine induced an EBOV-specific cellular response that was greatest in the lungs and yielded polyfunctional CD8+ T cells, including a subset that expressed CD103 (αE integrin), and CD4+ T helper cells that were predominately type 1. The magnitude of the CD4+ T cell response was greater in aerosol vaccinees. The HPIV3/EboGP vaccine produced a more robust cell-mediated and humoral immune response than the systemic replicon vaccine. Moreover, 1 aerosol HPIV3/EboGP dose conferred 100% protection to macaques exposed to EBOV. Aerosol vaccination represents a useful and feasible vaccination mode that can be implemented with ease in a filovirus disease outbreak situation.

Authors

Michelle Meyer, Tania Garron, Ndongala M. Lubaki, Chad E. Mire, Karla A. Fenton, Curtis Klages, Gene G. Olinger, Thomas W. Geisbert, Peter L. Collins, Alexander Bukreyev

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Figure 5

Cell-mediated response in vaccine recipients from study 1.

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Cell-mediated response in vaccine recipients from study 1.
NHPs were vac...
NHPs were vaccinated with HPIV3/EboGP aerosol (n = 4; green symbols), HPIV3/EboGP liquid (n = 4; red), the VRP vaccine (n = 4; blue), or HPIV3 control (n = 2; black). Magnitude of CD8+ CD103+ (left) and CD103– (middle) T cell subsets and CD4+ T cells (right) from the (A and D) lungs, (B) blood, and (C) spleen positive for markers of activation following GP peptide stimulation, displayed as (A–C) a percentage of total CD8+ or CD4+ cells or (D) level of expression (MFI). The group means are shown by horizontal bars. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001; ****P < 0.0001, by 2-way ANOVA with Tukey’s post-hoc test.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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