| Literature DB >> 19187552 |
Abstract
Since the announcement of the STEP trial results in the past months, we have heard many sober pronouncements on the possibility of an HIV vaccine. On the other hand, optimistic quotations have been liberally used, from Shakespeare's Henry V's "Once more unto the breach, dear friends" to Winston Churchill's definition of success as "going from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm". I will forgo optimistic quotations for the phrase "Sang Froid", which translates literally from the French as "cold blood"; what it really means is to avoid panic when things look bad, to step back and coolly evaluate the situation. This is not to counsel easy optimism or to fly in face of the facts, but I believe that while the situation is serious, it is not desperate.I should stipulate at the outset that I am neither an immunologist nor an expert in HIV, but someone who has spent his life in vaccine development. What I will try to do is to provide a point of view from that experience.There is no doubt that the results of STEP were disappointing: not only did the vaccine fail to control viral load, but may have adversely affected susceptibility to infection. But HIV is not the only vaccine to experience difficulties; what lessons can we glean from prior vaccine development?Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19187552 PMCID: PMC2647531 DOI: 10.1186/1758-2652-12-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
Severe reactions to Inactivated Measles and RSV Vaccines
| Following exposure, vaccinees had exaggerated disease in lungs. |
|---|
| Pathology included immune complex deposition and high replication in the lungs. |
| Vaccines elicited non-protective, low avidity, waning antibodies. |
| Vaccines elicited strong CD4+ proliferation with a Th2 cytokine response, including IL-13 |
| Caused cessation of use of both vaccines |
Similarities between Hepatitis C and HIV
| HCV | HIV | |
|---|---|---|
| Envelope and Core Ags | ||
| Glycosylated envelope protein | ||
| Envelope is neut. target, but hypervariable | ||
| Chronic viremia | ||
| Escape mutation | ||
| Geographical genetic variation | ||
| PD-1 Upregulated | ||
| High titer neutralizing Ab protects | ||
| Strong cell responses against multiple epitopes necessary for control of viremia | ||
| CD4+ cells needed to sustain CD8+ T cells | ||
| Tcm cells needed for long-term control |
Figure 1Neutralizing antibodies in patients with resolved or chronic hepatitis C.
Novel approaches to the design of envelope immunogens
| Mimic native trimer on virion surface |
|---|
| Redirect immune responses to conserved conformational epitopes |
| Add disulfides or other amino acids to stabilize conformational epitopes |
| Bind envelope to CD4 or CD4-mimetic peptide |
| Remove carbohydrate residue or entire carbohydrate side chains |
| Redirect responses away from variable epitopes |
| Remove one or more variable loops |
| Add carbohydrate side chains to hide |
| variable regions |
Estimates of titers of neutralizing antibodies required for sterile protection against HIV.
| Investigator | Titer | SN | Species | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trkola et al [ | 1/200 | 70% | Human | Acute infection |
| Parren et al [ | 1/400 | 90% | Macaques | SHIV Challenge |
| Nishimura et al. [ | 1/38 | 100% | Macaques | SHIV Challenge |
| Mascola et al [ | 1/50, 1/29–1/88 | 90% | Macaques | SHIV Challenge |
| Trkola et al [ | 1/400 | 90% | Human | Rebound after HAART |
Figure 2Control of High SHIV Viral Load by CD8+ Cells After Vaccination.
Figure 3Control of High SIV Viral Load by cellular Responses to DNA/Adeno Vaccination.
Cellular immune responses to HIV that could be improved
| Quantity of specific CD8+ cells |
|---|
| Polyfunctionality of CD8+ cells |
| Avidity of CD8+ cells |
| Number of epitopes seen |
| Intestinal homing of CD8+ cells |
| Th17/Tregs balance |
| Increased CD4+ central memory cells |
| Increased CD8+ central memory cells |
Do vaccines elicit "sterile" immunity?
| Yes | Depends Mucosal Presence of Antibody |
|---|---|
| Diphtheria | Polio |
| Hepatitis A | Hib |
| Hepatitis B | Influenza |
| Lyme | Measles |
| Rabies | Pertussis |
| Tetanus | Rubella |
| Yellow Fever | Varicella |
Figure 4Acquisition of HIV by Kenyan Sex Workers Prevented by Genital IgA and Systemic T Cell Proliferation. Obviously, there are many problems to solve in attempting mucosal immunization. One approach is to mix routes of administration, for example priming with oral vaccination and following with parenteral boost. Moreover, it is not impossible to consider mixed intranasal and intrarectal administration to immunize both the genital and gastrointestinal tract. Aerosol administration of HPV vaccine has been reported to induce IgA secreting cells in the genital tract [115], and there is recent work suggesting that sublingual administration of antigens may be a way around compartmentalization of mucosal immunity [116] (see table 7).
Some newer strategies for an HIV vaccine
| Replicating vectors, e.g. Adenoviruses 4 and 7, CMV, Sendai, VSV, alphavirus-VSV |
|---|
| DNA plasmids with electroporation |
| Non-parenteral routes of administration: intranasal, rectal, sublingual |
| DNA/NYVAC prime boost regimen |
| Gene-driven HIV antibody |
| Anti-phospholipid antibodies |
| Live, attenuated HIV, e.g. Δnef, Δnef/vpr, ΔGY |
| (Canarypox/gp prime-boost 120 trial still ongoing in Thailand) |