Intensified and protective CD4+ T cell immunity in mice with anti–dendritic cell HIV gag fusion antibody vaccine

C Trumpfheller, JS Finke, CB López… - The Journal of …, 2006 - rupress.org
C Trumpfheller, JS Finke, CB López, TM Moran, B Moltedo, H Soares, Y Huang…
The Journal of experimental medicine, 2006rupress.org
Current human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccine approaches emphasize prime boost
strategies comprising multiple doses of DNA vaccine and recombinant viral vectors. We are
developing a protein-based approach that directly harnesses principles for generating T cell
immunity. Vaccine is delivered to maturing dendritic cells in lymphoid tissue by engineering
protein antigen into an antibody to DEC-205, a receptor for antigen presentation. Here we
characterize the CD4+ T cell immune response to HIV gag and compare efficacy with other …
Current human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccine approaches emphasize prime boost strategies comprising multiple doses of DNA vaccine and recombinant viral vectors. We are developing a protein-based approach that directly harnesses principles for generating T cell immunity. Vaccine is delivered to maturing dendritic cells in lymphoid tissue by engineering protein antigen into an antibody to DEC-205, a receptor for antigen presentation. Here we characterize the CD4+ T cell immune response to HIV gag and compare efficacy with other vaccine strategies in a single dose. DEC-205–targeted HIV gag p24 or p41 induces stronger CD4+ T cell immunity relative to high doses of gag protein, HIV gag plasmid DNA, or recombinant adenovirus-gag. High frequencies of interferon (IFN)-γ– and interleukin 2–producing CD4+ T cells are elicited, including double cytokine-producing cells. In addition, the response is broad because the primed mice respond to an array of peptides in different major histocompatibility complex haplotypes. Long-lived T cell memory is observed. After subcutaneous vaccination, CD4+ and IFN-γ–dependent protection develops to a challenge with recombinant vaccinia-gag virus at a mucosal surface, the airway. We suggest that a DEC-targeted vaccine, in part because of an unusually strong and protective CD4+ T cell response, will improve vaccine efficacy as a stand-alone approach or with other modalities.
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