
Delivering HIV Gagp24 to DCIR Induces Strong Antibody Responses In Vivo
Author(s) -
Anne-Laure Flamar,
Vanessa Contreras,
Sandra Zurawski,
Monica Montes,
N Dereuddre-Bosquet,
Frédéric Marti,
Jacques Banchereau,
Roger Le Grand,
Gérard Zurawski,
Yves Lévy
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0135513
Subject(s) - avidity , immunogenicity , adjuvant , antigen , antibody , immune system , virology , biology , monoclonal antibody , peripheral blood mononuclear cell , antibody titer , immunology , in vitro , titer , biochemistry
Targeting dendritic cell-specific endocytic receptors using monoclonal antibodies fused to desired antigens is an approach widely used in vaccine development to enhance the poor immunogenicity of protein-based vaccines and to induce immune responses. Here, we engineered an anti-human DCIR recombinant antibody, which cross-reacts with the homologous cynomolgous macaque receptor and was fused via the heavy chain C-terminus to HIV Gagp24 protein (αDCIR.Gagp24). In vitro , αDCIR.Gagp24 expanded multifunctional antigen-specific memory CD4 + T cells recognizing multiple Gagp24 peptides from HIV-infected patient peripheral blood mononuclear cells. In non human primates, priming with αDCIR.Gagp24 without adjuvant elicited a strong anti-Gagp24 antibody response after the second immunization, while in the non-targeted HIV Gagp24 protein control groups the titers were weak. The presence of the double-stranded RNA poly(I:C) adjuvant significantly enhanced the anti-Gagp24 antibody response in all the groups and reduced the discrimination between the different vaccine groups. The avidity of the anti-Gagp24 antibody responses was similar with either αDCIR.Gagp24 or Gagp24 immunization, but increased from medium to high avidity in both groups when poly(I:C) was co-administered. This data provides a comparative analysis of DC-targeted and non-targeted proteins for their capacity to induce antigen-specific antibody responses in vivo . This study supports the further development of DCIR-based DC-targeting vaccines for protective durable antibody induction, especially in the absence of adjuvant.