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A New Adenovirus Based Vaccine Vector Expressing an Eimeria tenella Derived TLR Agonist Improves Cellular Immune Responses to an Antigenic Target

Authors :
William H. DePas
Nathaniel J. Schuldt
Sung Jin Kim
Yasser A. Aldhamen
Andrea Amalfitano
J. Justin McCormick
Sarah Godbehere
Chyong Jy J Liu
Daniel M. Appledorn
Igor V. Zlatkin
Sergey S. Seregin
Dionisia Quiroga
Darin Quach
Source :
PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 5, Iss 3, p e9579 (2010)
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Public Library of Science, 2010.

Abstract

Background Adenoviral based vectors remain promising vaccine platforms for use against numerous pathogens, including HIV. Recent vaccine trials utilizing Adenovirus based vaccines expressing HIV antigens confirmed induction of cellular immune responses, but these responses failed to prevent HIV infections in vaccinees. This illustrates the need to develop vaccine formulations capable of generating more potent T-cell responses to HIV antigens, such as HIV-Gag, since robust immune responses to this antigen correlate with improved outcomes in long-term non-progressor HIV infected individuals. Methodology/Principal Findings In this study we designed a novel vaccine strategy utilizing an Ad-based vector expressing a potent TLR agonist derived from Eimeria tenella as an adjuvant to improve immune responses from a [E1-]Ad-based HIV-Gag vaccine. Our results confirm that expression of rEA elicits significantly increased TLR mediated innate immune responses as measured by the influx of plasma cytokines and chemokines, and activation of innate immune responding cells. Furthermore, our data show that the quantity and quality of HIV-Gag specific CD8+ and CD8− T-cell responses were significantly improved when coupled with rEA expression. These responses also correlated with a significantly increased number of HIV-Gag derived epitopes being recognized by host T cells. Finally, functional assays confirmed that rEA expression significantly improved antigen specific CTL responses, in vivo. Moreover, we show that these improved responses were dependent upon improved TLR pathway interactions. Conclusion/Significance The data presented in this study illustrate the potential utility of Ad-based vectors expressing TLR agonists to improve clinical outcomes dependent upon induction of robust, antigen specific immune responses.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
5
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f4ef9537dd2b5a8f689a1496ae24281