| Literature DB >> 20951666 |
Andreas Bråve1, Lindvi Gudmundsdotter, Eric Sandström, B Kristian Haller, David Hallengärd, Anna-Karin Maltais, Alan D King, Richard R Stout, Pontus Blomberg, Urban Höglund, Bo Hejdeman, Gunnel Biberfeld, Britta Wahren.
Abstract
It is likely that gene-based vaccines will enter the human vaccine area soon. A few veterinary vaccines employing this concept have already been licensed, and a multitude of clinical trials against infectious diseases or different forms of cancer are ongoing. Highly important when developing novel vaccines are the safety aspects and also new adjuvants and delivery techniques needs to be carefully investigated so that they meet all short- and long-term safety requirements. One novel in vivo delivery method for plasmid vaccines is electroporation, which is the application of short pulses of electric current immediately after, and at the site of, an injection of a genetic vaccine. This method has been shown to significantly augment the transfection efficacy and the subsequent vaccine-specific immune responses. However, the dramatic increase in delivery efficacy offered by electroporation has raised concerns of potential increase in the risk of integration of plasmid DNA into the host genome. Here, we demonstrate the safety and lack of integration after immunization with a high dose of a multigene HIV-1 vaccine delivered intradermally using the needle free device Biojector 2000 together with electroporation using Derma Vax™ DNA Vaccine Skin Delivery System. We demonstrate that plasmids persist in the skin at the site of injection for at least four months after immunization. However, no association between plasmid DNA and genomic DNA could be detected as analyzed by qPCR following field inversion gel electrophoresis separating heavy and light DNA fractions. We will shortly initiate a phase I clinical trial in which healthy volunteers will be immunized with this multiplasmid HIV-1 vaccine using a combination of the delivery methods jet-injection and intradermal electroporation.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20951666 PMCID: PMC7126493 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2010.08.108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641
Previous experiments analyzing plasmid persistence after immunization.
| Antigen | Dose/route | Species/sex | Max local conc. at the site of injection | Liver | Spleen | Gonads |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIV GagPol (Winegar et al. | 400 μg i.m. | Rabbit ♀, ♂ | 6 × 106 c/μg @4 h | 0/5 > 10 c/μg @4 h | 0/5 > 10 c/μg @4 h | 0/5 > 10 c/μg @4 h |
| Malaria PfCSP (Parker et al. | 50 μg i.m. | Mouse ♀, ♂ | >100 c/μg @1 h | 5/6 < 100 c/μg@1 h 0/6 < 100 c/μg @2 d | 5/6<100 c/μg@1 h 0/6 < 100 c/μg @2 d | 3/6 < 100 c/μg @1 h 0/6 < 100 c/μg @2 d |
| HIV Gag (Manam et al. | 320 μg i.m. | Mouse♀, ♂ | ND | >16 c/μg @2 d 0 c/μg @6 w | 1–2 c/μg @2 d 0 c/μg @6 w | 0–40 c/μg @2 d 0 c/μg @6 w |
| HIV Gag/Env/Pol/Vif/Nef/Tat/Vpu (Kim et al. | 100 μg i.m., i.v. | Mouse♂ | 150 ng/mg tissue @5 min | 5/5 > 0.5 pg @1,5 h 0/5 > 0.5 pg @8 h | 3/5 > 0.5 pg @1.5 h, 0/5 > 0.5 pg @ 8 h | 4/5 > 0.5pg @1.5 h, 0/5 > 0.5pg @8 h |
| hDel-1 (Quezada et al. | 16 μg i.v. | Mouse♀, ♂ | ND | 2/6 > 1000 c/μg DNA@24 h 0/6 > 1000 c/μg DNA@1 w | 2/6 > 1000 c/μg DNA@24 h 0/6 > 1000 c/μg DNA@1 w | 1/6 > 1000 c/μg DNA@24 h 0/6 > 1000 c/μg DNA@1 w |
| Foot and mouth disease (Zhang et al. | 200 μg i.m. | Mouse ♀, ♂ | 53,000 c/μg@10 min | 35 ± 27 c/μg @10 min 0/6 > 10 c/μg @1 w | 6/6 > 10 c/μg @10 min 4/6 > 10 c/μg @1 w | 4/6 > 10 c/μg @10 min 0/6 > 10 c/μg @24 h |
| MVA-HIVA (multigene) (Hanke et al. | 50 μg i.m. | Mouse♀, ♂ | ND | 0/3 > 10 c/μg @46 d | 0/3 > 10 c/μg @46 d | 0/3 > 10 c/μg @46 d |
| 10 plasmids HIV, Ebola v, SARS v, WNV, Malaria (Sheets et al. | 100 μg 2000 μg i.m., i.d. | Mouse, rabbit ♀, ♂ | 104 to 106 μg/DNA@9 d | All < 50 c/μg @30 d | All < 50 c/μg @30 d | All < 50 c/μg @30 d |
| Porcine herpes virus (Gravier et al. | 481 μg i.m. | Pig ♀ | ND | ND | ND | 1/3 > 500 c/μg @1 d 0/3 > 500 c/μg @17 d |
| Measles virus (Ramirez et al. | 1840 μg i.d. | Rabbit ♀, ♂ | 106 c/μg DNA@9,31,60 d | 0/15 > 10 c/μg @9,31,60 d | 0/15 > 10 c/μg @9,31,60 d | 0/15 > 10 c/μg @9,31,60 d |
| Hepatitis C virus (Bacardi et al. | 50 μg i.m. | Mouse ♀ | 5/5 > 100 c/μg @1 h; 5/5 > 100 c/μg @17 h: 5/5 > 100 c/μg @30 d | 5/5 > 100 c/μg @1 h; 5/5 > 100 c/μg @17 h: 0/5 > 100 c/μg @30 d | ND | 5/5 > 100 c/μg @1 h; 0/5 > 100 c/μg @17 h |
c/μg: plasmid copy number/μg total DNA, X/Y: X indicates X positive animals out of Y analyzed.
ND: not determined; i.m.: intramuscular; i.d.: intradermal; i.v. intravenous; w: week; d: day; MVA: Modified Vaccinia virus Ankara; WNV: West Nile Virus; SARSv: Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome virus; hDel-1: human developmentally regulated endothelial locus-1 protein.
Fig. 1Schematic overview of the antigen encoded by the seven different plasmids. V: variable loop; A, B, C – indicates that the protein, or indicated part of the protein, derives from HIV-1 of subtype A, B, or C, respectively.
Biodistribution, pKCMV quantitative PCR results (copies of pKCMV per microgram total DNA).
| Sample | No. of plasmids/μg DNA | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 14 days | 40 days | 60 days | 120 days | |
| Brain | – | – | – | – |
| Heart | – | – | – | – |
| Liver | – | – | – | – |
| Lung | – | – | 98 | – |
| Spleen | – | 2382 | – | – |
| Kidney | – | – | – | – |
| Ovaries | 103 | – | – | – |
| Intestine | – | – | – | – |
| Muscle | 4370 | 4760 | 606 | – |
| Skin | 4,984,841 | 117,700 | 138,548 | 3096 |
(−) <10 copies of plasmid/μg of total DNA.
Muscle located directly beneath the site of injection.
Skin from the site of injection.
Fig. 2Presence of plasmid in skin at the injection site and underlying muscle. DNA was extracted and subjected to qPCR-analysis detecting the plasmid backbone. Results are shown as number of copies of plasmid/μg of extracted DNA at the indicated time points after immunization. Exact plasmid copy number for each time-point can be found in Table 2.
pKCMV quantitative PCR results before and after FIGE (Copies of pKCMV per microgram total DNA).
| Pool no. | Animal Nos. | Extracted gDNA | Primary FIGE | Secondary FIGE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (Untreated controls) | 1–8 | BLD | N/A | N/A |
| 2 (Untreated controls) | 9–16 | NQ | N/A | N/A |
| 3 (Immunized) | 17–24 | 881,316 | 419 | NQ |
| 4 (Immunized) | 25–32 | 546,352 | 385 | BLD |
| 5 (Immunized) | 33–40 | 664,524 | 554 | NQ |
| 6 (Immunized) | 41–48 | 367,767 | 807 | BLD |
| Mean value groups 3–6 | 615,989 ± 215,000 | 541 ± 191 | <10 | |
| Median value groups 3–6 | 605,438 | 487 |
BLD – below the limit of detection of the assay (<10 copies/μg DNA). NQ – below level of quantification (<100 copies/μg DNA). N/A – not applicable; separation not performed; specimen tested BLD or NQ for the pKCMV assay.
Template is gDNA.
Template is HMW DNA derived from restriction enzyme digested genomic DNA separated from plasmid DNA by field inversion gel electrophoresis.
Template is HMW DNA derived from primary FIGE HMW DNA subjected to successive round of field inversion gel electrophoresis.
Fig. 3ELISpot analysis of IFN-γ secretion by splenocytes from mice immunized with the 7 plasmid vaccine and stimulated with peptides from HIV-1 Gag or Env, respectively. The animals were sacrificed 2 weeks after the fourth immunization. Error bars show standard deviation. M: male, F: female, C: saline injected animals (both female and male mice).