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Mucosal Vaccination with Heterologous Viral Vectored Vaccine Targeting Subdominant SIV Accessory Antigens Strongly Inhibits Early Viral Replication
Author(s) -
Huanbin Xu,
AnneMarie Andersson,
Emeline Ragonnaud,
Ditte Rahbæk Boilesen,
Anders Tolver,
Benjamin A. H. Jensen,
James Blanchard,
Alfredo Nicosia,
Antonella Folgori,
Stefano Colloca,
Riccardo Cortese,
Allan Randrup Thomsen,
Jan Pravsgaard Christensen,
Ronald S. Veazey,
Peter Johannes Holst
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
ebiomedicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.596
H-Index - 63
ISSN - 2352-3964
DOI - 10.1016/j.ebiom.2017.03.003
Subject(s) - subdominant , heterologous , virology , viral replication , vaccination , antigen , viral load , biology , replication (statistics) , immunology , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , genetics , virus , epitope , gene
Conventional HIV T cell vaccine strategies have not been successful in containing acute peak viremia, nor in providing long-term control. We immunized rhesus macaques intramuscularly and rectally using a heterologous adenovirus vectored SIV vaccine regimen encoding normally weakly immunogenic tat, vif, rev and vpr antigens fused to the MHC class II associated invariant chain. Immunizations induced broad T cell responses in all vaccinees. Following up to 10 repeated low-dose intrarectal challenges, vaccinees suppressed early viral replication (P=0.01) and prevented the peak viremia in 5/6 animals. Despite consistently undetectable viremia in 2 out of 6 vaccinees, all animals showed evidence of infection induced immune responses indicating that infection had taken place. Vaccinees, with and without detectable viremia better preserved their rectal CD4+ T cell population and had reduced immune hyperactivation as measured by naïve T cell depletion, Ki-67 and PD-1 expression on T cells. These results indicate that vaccination towards SIV accessory antigens vaccine can provide a level of acute control of SIV replication with a suggestion of beneficial immunological consequences in infected animals of unknown long-term significance. In conclusion, our studies demonstrate that a vaccine encoding subdominant antigens not normally associated with virus control can exert a significant impact on acute peak viremia.

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