Literature DB >> 17961117

HIV type 1 vaccines for worldwide use: predicting in-clade and cross-clade breadth of immune responses.

Adam C Finnefrock1, Xiaomei Liu, David W Opalka, John W Shiver, Danilo R Casimiro, Jon H Condra.   

Abstract

One of the greatest challenges in HIV vaccine development is accommodating the worldwide sequence diversity of the HIV-1 virus. To understand how viral sequence diversity may affect the potential breadth of HIV-1 vaccines designed to elicit antiviral T cell immunity, we have developed novel approaches to assess sequence conservation at the amino acid level, where vaccine effects are exerted. Taking each sequence from the LANL 2004 amino acid alignments as a potential vaccine or as a challenge virus, all pairwise combinations of sequences were evaluated by two methods: first, a traditional comparison of aligned sequences, and second, by a new walking 9-mer algorithm chosen to emphasize the typical length of an MHC-I epitope. The rules for comparing mismatched 9-mer pairs between vaccine and challenge sequences were empirically deduced from an experiment on Nef-specific CD8 epitopes and the viral sequences from naturally HIV-1-infected patients. Results were weighted such that each clade contributed in proportion to its global prevalence. Cross-clade breadth of response is best maintained for vaccines encoding Pol and Gag, while commonly proposed Env- and Tat-based vaccines would be more clade sensitive. We evaluated the additional breadth that could be expected from multiclade vaccines including consensus and ancestral sequences. For more diverse proteins, adding a second strain can add a significant increase in breadth, although for three or more strains the intrinsic diversity of the protein leads to diminishing improvement.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17961117     DOI: 10.1089/aid.2007.0098

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses        ISSN: 0889-2229            Impact factor:   2.205


  8 in total

1.  Mosaic HIV-1 Gag antigens can be processed and presented to human HIV-specific CD8+ T cells.

Authors:  Zaza M Ndhlovu; Alicja Piechocka-Trocha; Seanna Vine; Ashley McMullen; Kegakilwe C Koofhethile; Phillip J R Goulder; Thumbi Ndung'u; Dan H Barouch; Bruce D Walker
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2011-05-16       Impact factor: 5.422

2.  Cocktail of H5N1 COBRA HA vaccines elicit protective antibodies against H5N1 viruses from multiple clades.

Authors:  Corey J Crevar; Donald M Carter; Kevin Y J Lee; Ted M Ross
Journal:  Hum Vaccin Immunother       Date:  2015       Impact factor: 3.452

3.  Target peptide sequence within infectious human immunodeficiency virus type 1 does not ensure envelope-specific T-helper cell reactivation: influences of cysteine protease and gamma interferon-induced thiol reductase activities.

Authors:  Robert Sealy; Wendy Chaka; Sherri Surman; Scott A Brown; Peter Cresswell; Julia L Hurwitz
Journal:  Clin Vaccine Immunol       Date:  2008-01-30

4.  Design and evaluation of multi-gene, multi-clade HIV-1 MVA vaccines.

Authors:  Patricia L Earl; Catherine Cotter; Bernard Moss; Thomas VanCott; Jeffrey Currier; Leigh Anne Eller; Francine McCutchan; Deborah L Birx; Nelson L Michael; Mary A Marovich; Merlin Robb; Josephine H Cox
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2009-08-03       Impact factor: 3.641

5.  The antiviral efficacy of HIV-specific CD8⁺ T-cells to a conserved epitope is heavily dependent on the infecting HIV-1 isolate.

Authors:  Srinika R F Ranasinghe; Holger B Kramer; Cynthia Wright; Benedikt M Kessler; Katalin di Gleria; Yonghong Zhang; Geraldine M Gillespie; Marie-Eve Blais; Abigail Culshaw; Tica Pichulik; Alison Simmons; Sarah L Rowland-Jones; Andrew J McMichael; Tao Dong
Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2011-05-12       Impact factor: 6.823

6.  Mapping HIV-1 vaccine induced T-cell responses: bias towards less-conserved regions and potential impact on vaccine efficacy in the Step study.

Authors:  Fusheng Li; Adam C Finnefrock; Sheri A Dubey; Bette T M Korber; James Szinger; Suzanne Cole; M Juliana McElrath; John W Shiver; Danilo R Casimiro; Lawrence Corey; Steven G Self
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-06-10       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Group M consensus Gag and Nef peptides are as efficient at detecting clade A1 and D cross-subtype T-cell functions as subtype-specific consensus peptides.

Authors:  S Mugaba; R Nakiboneka; M Nanyonjo; D Bugembe-Lule; I Kaddu; B Nanteza; R Tweyongyere; P Kaleebu; J Serwanga
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2014-05-14       Impact factor: 3.641

8.  Synthetic immunotherapy induces HIV virus specific Th1 cytotoxic response and death of an HIV-1 infected human cell line through classic complement activation.

Authors:  Olga Pleguezuelos; Gregory A Stoloff; Wilson Caparrós-Wanderley
Journal:  Virol J       Date:  2013-04-04       Impact factor: 4.099

  8 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.