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Protective Cellular Immunity Against Influenza VirusInduced by Plasmid Inoculation of Newborn Mice
Author(s) -
Adrian Bot,
Simona Bot,
Adolfo Garcı́a-Sastre,
Constantin A. Bona
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
journal of immunology research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2314-8861
pISSN - 2314-7156
DOI - 10.1155/1998/50472
Subject(s) - immunity , virology , virus , immune system , biology , plasmid , immunization , vaccination , immunology , cellular immunity , antigen , influenza a virus , priming (agriculture) , dna vaccination , microbiology and biotechnology , dna , genetics , germination , botany
Neonate organisms display an intrinsic disability to mount effective immune responses to infectious agents or conventional vaccines. Whereas low doses of antigens trigger a suboptimal response, higher doses are frequently associated with tolerance induction. We investigated the ability of a plasmid-expressing nucleoprotein of influenza virus to prime a specific cellular immune response when administered to newborn mice. We found that persistent exposure to antigen following plasmid inoculation of neonates leads to a vigorous priming of specific CTLs rather than tolerance induction. The CTLs were cross-reactive against multiple strains of type A influenza viruses and produced IFNgamma but no IL-4. The immunity triggered by plasmid inoculation of neonates was protective in terms of pulmonary virus clearance as well as survival rate following lethal challenge with influenza virus. Whereas the persistence of the plasmid at the site of injection was readily demonstrable in adult mice at 3 months after inoculation, mice immunized as newborns displayed no plasmid at 3 months and very little at 1 month after injection. Thus, DNA-based immunization of neonates may prove an effective and safe vaccination strategy for induction of cellular immunity against microbes that cause serious infectious diseases in the early period of life.

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