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Loss of HIV candidate vaccine efficacy in male macaques by mucosal nanoparticle immunization rescued by V2-specific response

Authors :
Mohammad Arif Rahman
Massimiliano Bissa
Hanna Scinto
Savannah E. Howe
Sarkis Sarkis
Zhong-Min Ma
Anna Gutowska
Xunqing Jiang
Christina C. Luo
Luca Schifanella
Ramona Moles
Isabela Silva de Castro
Shraddha Basu
Kombo F. N’guessan
LaTonya D. Williams
Manuel Becerra-Flores
Melvin N. Doster
Tanya Hoang
Hyoyoung Choo-Wosoba
Emmanuel Woode
Yongjun Sui
Georgia D. Tomaras
Dominic Paquin-Proulx
Mangala Rao
James D. Talton
Xiang-Peng Kong
Susan Zolla-Pazner
Timothy Cardozo
Genoveffa Franchini
Jay A. Berzofsky
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 15, Iss 1, Pp 1-19 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2024.

Abstract

Abstract Systemic vaccination of macaques with V1-deleted (ΔV1) envelope immunogens reduce the risk of SIVmac251 acquisition by approximately 60%, with protective roles played by V2-specific ADCC and envelope-specific mucosal IL-17+NKp44+ innate lymphoid cells (ILCs). We investigated whether increased mucosal responses to V2 benefit vaccine efficacy by delivering oral nanoparticles (NPs) that release V2-scaffolded on Typhoid Toxin B (TTB) to the large intestine. Strikingly, mucosal immunization of male macaques abrogated vaccine efficacy with control TTB or empty NPs, but vaccine efficacy of up to 47.6% was preserved with V2-TTB NPs. The deleterious effects of NPs were linked to preferential recruitment of mucosal plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs), reduction of protective mucosal NKp44+ ILCs, increased non-protective mucosal PMA/Ionomycin-induced IFN-γ+NKG2A-NKp44-ILCs, and increased levels of mucosal activated Ki67+CD4+ T cells, a potential target for virus infection. V2-TTB NP mucosal boosting rescued vaccine efficacy, likely via high avidity V2-specific antibodies mediating ADCC, and higher frequencies of mucosal NKp44+ ILCs and of ∆V1gp120 binding antibody-secreting B cells in the rectal mucosa. These findings emphasize the central role of systemic immunization and mucosal V2-specific antibodies in the protection afforded by ΔV1 envelope immunogens and encourage careful evaluation of vaccine delivery platforms to avoid inducing immune responses favorable to HIV transmission.

Subjects

Subjects :
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.46022c8eff943a69e28ba2d4818429f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-53359-2