Comparative efficacy of recombinant modified vaccinia virus Ankara expressing simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) Gag-Pol and/or Env in macaques challenged …

I Ourmanov, CR Brown, B Moss, M Carroll… - Journal of …, 2000 - Am Soc Microbiol
I Ourmanov, CR Brown, B Moss, M Carroll, L Wyatt, L Pletneva, S Goldstein, D Venzon…
Journal of Virology, 2000Am Soc Microbiol
Prior studies demonstrated that immunization of macaques with simian immunodeficiency
virus (SIV) Gag-Pol and Env recombinants of the attenuated poxvirus modified vaccinia virus
Ankara (MVA) provided protection from high levels of viremia and AIDS following challenge
with a pathogenic strain of SIV (VM Hirsch et al., J. Virol. 70: 3741–3752, 1996). This MVA-
SIV recombinant expressed relatively low levels of the Gag-Pol portion of the vaccine. To
optimize protection, second-generation recombinant MVAs that expressed high levels of …
Abstract
Prior studies demonstrated that immunization of macaques with simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) Gag-Pol and Env recombinants of the attenuated poxvirus modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) provided protection from high levels of viremia and AIDS following challenge with a pathogenic strain of SIV (V. M. Hirsch et al., J. Virol. 70:3741–3752, 1996). This MVA-SIV recombinant expressed relatively low levels of the Gag-Pol portion of the vaccine. To optimize protection, second-generation recombinant MVAs that expressed high levels of either Gag-Pol (MVA-gag-pol) or Env (MVA-env), alone or in combination (MVA-gag-pol-env), were generated. A cohort of 24 macaques was immunized with recombinant or nonrecombinant MVA (four groups of six animals) and was challenged with 50 times the dose at which 50% of macaques are infected with uncloned pathogenic SIVsmE660. Although all animals became infected postchallenge, plasma viremia was significantly reduced in animals that received the MVA-SIV recombinant vaccines as compared with animals that received nonrecombinant MVA (P = 0.0011 by repeated-measures analysis of variance). The differences in the degree of virus suppression achieved by the three MVA-SIV vaccines were not significant. Most importantly, the reduction in levels of viremia resulted in a significant increase in median (P < 0.05 by Student's t test) and cumulative (P = 0.010 by log rank test) survival. These results suggest that recombinant MVA has considerable potential as a vaccine vector for human AIDS.
American Society for Microbiology