Skip NavigationSkip to Content

Therapeutic conserved elements (CE) DNA vaccine induces strong T-cell responses against highly conserved viral sequences during simian-human immunodeficiency virus infection

  1. Author:
    Munson, Paul
    Liu, Yi
    Bratt, Debra
    Fuller, James T
    Hu, Xintao
    Pavlakis, George [ORCID]
    Felber, Barbara [ORCID]
    Mullins, James I
    Fuller, Deborah Heydenburg
  2. Author Address

    a Departments of Microbiology, Medicine, Global Health, and Laboratory Medicine , University of Washington , Seattle , WA , US., b Washington National Primate Research Center , Seattle , WA , US., c Human Retrovirus Pathogenesis Section and Human Retrovirus Section, Vaccine Branch, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute at Frederick , Frederick , MD , US., d Human Retrovirus Section, Vaccine Branch, Center for Cancer Research , National Cancer Institute at Frederick , Frederick , MD , US., e Department of Medicine , University of Washington , Seattle , WA , US., f Department of Global Health , University of Washington , Seattle , WA , US., g Department of Laboratory Medicine , University of Washington , Seattle , WA , US.,
    1. Year: 2018
    2. Date: Apr 12
    3. Epub Date: 2018 04 12
  1. Journal: Human vaccines & immunotherapeutics
    1. 14
    2. 7
    3. Pages: 1820-1831
  2. Type of Article: Article
  3. ISSN: 2164-5515
  1. Abstract:

    HIV-specific T-cell responses play a key role in controlling HIV infection, and therapeutic vaccines for HIV that aim to improve viral control will likely need to improve on the T-cell responses induced by infection. However, in the setting of chronic infection, an effective therapeutic vaccine must overcome the enormous viral genetic diversity and the presence of pre-existing T-cell responses that are biased toward immunodominant T-cell epitopes that can readily mutate to evade host immunity and thus potentially provide inferior protection. To address these issues, we investigated a novel, epidermally administered DNA vaccine expressing SIV capsid (p27Gag) homologues of highly conserved elements (CE) of the HIV proteome in macaques experiencing chronic but controlled SHIV infection. We assessed the ability to boost or induce de novo T-cell responses against the conserved but immunologically subdominant CE epitopes. Two groups of animals were immunized with either the CE DNA vaccine or a full-length SIV p57gag DNA vaccine. Prior to vaccination, CE responses were similar in both groups. The full-length p57gag DNA vaccine, which contains the CE, increased overall Gag-specific responses but did not increase CE responses in any animals (0/4). In contrast, the CE DNA vaccine increased CE responses in all (4/4) vaccinated macaques. In SIV infected but unvaccinated macaques, those that developed stronger CE-specific responses during acute infection exhibited lower viral loads. We conclude that CE DNA vaccination can re-direct the immunodominance hierarchy towards CE in the setting of attenuated chronic infection and that induction of these responses by therapeutic vaccination may improve immune control of HIV.

    See More

External Sources

  1. DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2018.1448328
  2. PMID: 29648490
  3. WOS: 000452166800044

Library Notes

  1. Fiscal Year: FY2017-2018
NCI at FrederickClose Button

You are leaving a government website.

This external link provides additional information that is consistent with the intended purpose of this site. The government cannot attest to the accuracy of a non-federal site.

Linking to a non-federal site does not constitute an endorsement by this institution or any of its employees of the sponsors or the information and products presented on the site. You will be subject to the destination site's privacy policy when you follow the link.

ContinueCancel