| Literature DB >> 17935840 |
Qifeng Zhou1, Rachmat Hidajat, Bo Peng, David Venzon, M Kristine Aldrich, Ersell Richardson, Eun Mi Lee, V S Kalyanaraman, George Grimes, V Raúl Gómez-Román, L Ebonita Summers, Nina Malkevich, Marjorie Robert-Guroff.
Abstract
Oral, replication-competent Ad-HIV vaccines are advancing to human trials. Previous evaluation of protective efficacy in non-human primates has primarily followed upper respiratory tract administrations. Here we compared sequential oral (O/O) versus intranasal/oral (I/O) priming of rhesus macaques with Ad5 host range mutant-SIV recombinants expressing SIV env/rev, gag, and nef genes followed by boosting with SIV gp120 protein. Cellular immune responses in PBMC were stronger and more frequent after I/O administration. Both groups developed mucosal immunity, including memory cells in bronchial alveolar lavage, and gut-homing receptors on PBMC. Following intrarectal SIV(mac251) challenge, both groups exhibited equivalent, significant protection and robust post-challenge cellular immunity. Our results illustrate the promise of oral replication-competent Ad-recombinant vaccines. Pre-challenge PBMC ELISPOT and proliferative responses did not predict protection in the O/O group, highlighting the need for simple, non-invasive methods to reliably assess mucosal immunity.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17935840 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2007.09.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641