| Literature DB >> 18063357 |
Abstract
Viral vectors provide a convenient means to deliver vaccine antigens to select target cells or tissues. A broad spectrum of replicating and non-replicating vectors is available. An appropriate choice for select applications will depend on the biology of the infectious agent targeted, as well as factors such as whether the vaccine is intended to prevent infection or boost immunity in already infected individuals, prior exposure of the target population to the vector, safety, and the number and size of gene inserts needed. Here several viral vectors under development as HIV/AIDS vaccines are reviewed. A vaccine strategy based on initial priming with a replicating vector to enlist the innate immune system, target mucosal inductive sites, and prime both cellular and humoral systemic and mucosal immune responses is proposed. Subsequently, boosting with a replicating or non-replicating vector and/or protein subunits could lead to induction of necessary levels of protective immunity.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 18063357 PMCID: PMC2245896 DOI: 10.1016/j.copbio.2007.10.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Opin Biotechnol ISSN: 0958-1669 Impact factor: 9.740
Key features of replicating and non-replicating vaccine vectors
| Viral vector | Type | Insert | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adenovirus | Non-replicating; ds DNA | 7–8 kb | Prior immunity to Ad5 | |
| Targets mucosal inductive sites | High doses needed to elicit immunity | |||
| Infects dividing, non-dividing, and dendritic cells | ||||
| No integration | ||||
| Physically and genetically stable | ||||
| Safe | ||||
| Long history of gene therapy use | ||||
| Multiple serotypes and chimeric forms | ||||
| Adenovirus | Replicating ds DNA | 3–4 kb | Small insert size | |
| Common features above | Concern for intranasal administration | |||
| Low dose, mucosal delivery | ||||
| Persistent immunity | ||||
| Induction of immune modulators | ||||
| Safe as an oral vaccine | ||||
| Adeno-associated virus | Non-replicating; ss DNA | <5 kb | Resistant to acid; physically stable | Difficult production uses helper virus |
| Alternate serotypes available | Possible integration | |||
| Tropic for dendritic cells | Prior immunity to prevalent AAV2 | |||
| Non-pathogenic | ||||
| Alphavirus | Non-replicating; +ss RNA | <8 kb | No integration | Safety concerns regarding VEE |
| Does not elicit anti-vector immunity | Difficult to produce | |||
| Targets dendritic cells | ||||
| Highly immunogenic | ||||
| Herpesvirus | Non-replicating; ds DNA | <50 kb | Infects many cell types; targets mucosa | Prior immunity |
| Durable immunity | Lesser immunogenicity | |||
| Induces Th1 responses | Difficult to manufacture | |||
| Measles virus | Replicating; -ss RNA | >5 kb | Persistent immunity | Prior immunity |
| Infects dendritic cells, macrophages | ||||
| No integration; genetic stability | ||||
| Poxviruses: Vaccinia | Replicating; ds DNA | >10 kb | Excellent immunogenicity with history of eradicating smallpox | Safety concerns in immune compromised |
| Poxviruses: NYVAC; MVA | Non-replicating; ds DNA | >10 kb | Excellent immunogenicity; more immunogenic than avian poxviruses | Prior immunity |
| Poxviruses: ALVAC; FPV | Non-replicating; ds DNA | >10 kb | No prior immunity | Less immunogenic than mammalian poxviruses |
| Vesicular stomatitis virus | Replicating; -ss RNA | >5 kb | No integration; high level expression | Safety; potentially neurovirulent |
| Ease of production | Attenuated forms less immunogenic | |||
| No prior immunity | ||||
| Mucosal administration | ||||