IDEHU   05542
INSTITUTO DE ESTUDIOS DE LA INMUNIDAD HUMORAL PROF. RICARDO A. MARGNI
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Improving the MVA vaccine potential by deleting the viral gene coding for the IL-18 binding protein
Autor/es:
FALIVENE J; DEL MEDICO ZAJAC MP; PASCUTTI MF; RODRIGUEZ AM; MAETO C; PERDIGUERO B; GOMEZ CE; ESTEBAN M; CALAMANTE G; GHERARDI MM
Revista:
PLOS ONE
Editorial:
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
Referencias:
Lugar: San Francisco; Año: 2012 p. 1 - 15
ISSN:
1932-6203
Resumen:
Background: Modified Vaccinia Ankara (MVA) is an attenuated strain of Vaccinia virus (VACV) currently employed in many clinical trials against HIV/AIDS and other diseases. MVA still retains genes involved in host immune response evasion, enabling its optimization by removing some of them. The aim of this study was to evaluate cellular immune responses (CIR) induced by an IL-18 binding protein gene (C12L) deleted vector (MVADC12L).Methodology/Principal Findings: BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice were immunized with different doses of MVADC12L or MVA wild type (MVAwt), then CIR to VACV epitopes in immunogenic proteins were evaluated in spleen and draining lymph nodes at acute and memory phases (7 and 40 days post-immunization respectively). Compared with parental MVAwt, MVADC12L immunization induced a significant increase of two to three-fold in CD8+ and CD4+ T-cell responses to different VACV epitopes, with increased percentage of anti-VACV cytotoxic CD8+ T-cells (CD107a/b+) during the acute phase of the response. Importantly, the immunogenicity enhancement was also observed after MVADC12L inoculation with different viral doses and by distinct routes (systemic and mucosal). Potentiation of MVA?s CIR was also observed during the memory phase, in correlation with a higher protection against an intranasal challenge with VACV WR. Of note, we could also show a significant increase in the CIR against HIV antigens such as Env, Gag, Pol and Nef from different subtypes expressed from two recombinants of MVADC12L during heterologous DNA prime/MVA boost vaccination regimens.Conclusions/Significance: This study demonstrates the relevance of IL-18 bp contribution in the immune response evasion during MVA infection. Our findings clearly show that the deletion of the viral IL-18 bp gene is an effective approach to increase MVA vaccine efficacy, as immunogenicity improvements were observed against vector antigens and more importantly to HIV antigens.