| Literature DB >> 24304565 |
George M Warimwe1, Gema Lorenzo, Elena Lopez-Gil, Arturo Reyes-Sandoval, Matthew G Cottingham, Alexandra J Spencer, Katharine A Collins, Matthew D J Dicks, Anita Milicic, Amar Lall, Julie Furze, Alison V Turner, Adrian V S Hill, Alejandro Brun, Sarah C Gilbert.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rift Valley Fever (RVF) is a viral zoonosis that historically affects livestock production and human health in sub-Saharan Africa, though epizootics have also occurred in the Arabian Peninsula. Whilst an effective live-attenuated vaccine is available for livestock, there is currently no licensed human RVF vaccine. Replication-deficient chimpanzee adenovirus (ChAd) vectors are an ideal platform for development of a human RVF vaccine, given the low prevalence of neutralizing antibodies against them in the human population, and their excellent safety and immunogenicity profile in human clinical trials of vaccines against a wide range of pathogens.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24304565 PMCID: PMC4235025 DOI: 10.1186/1743-422X-10-349
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Figure 1Induction of virus neutralizing antibodies by ChAdOx1-GnGc and HAdV5-GnGc vaccines. For each vaccination regimen the virus neutralizing response (VNT50), acquired as the antibody titer resulting in 50% reduction of plaque formation relative to cells incubated with RVF virus in the absence of mouse serum, is shown. The data represent medians (bars) and interquartile ranges (error bars) for 14 mice per regimen. The Mann–Whitney U test is used for statistical comparisons between regimens. ** p <0.01, NS – not significant.
Efficacy of ChAdOx1-GnGc and HAdV5-GnGc vaccines against RVF virus challenge
| ChAdOx1-GnGc | 0/6 | 0 |
| ChAdOx1-GnGc + 25μl AddaVax™ | 0/6 | 0 |
| ChAdOx1-GnGc + 25μg Matrix-M™ | 0/6 | 0 |
| HAdV5-GnGc | 0/6 | 0 |
| HAdV5-GnGc + 25μl AddaVax™ | 0/6 | 0 |
| HAdV5-GnGc + 25μg Matrix-M™ | 0/6 | 0 |
| Unvaccinated controls | 6/6 | 21380 |
For each vaccination regimen the number of mice developing clinical signs of RVF following challenge with RVF virus is shown. Viraemia, assessed by RVF virus isolation three days post-challenge, is presented as median TCID50/ml for each regimen.
Figure 2Cellular responses to overlapping peptides from the Gn and Gc glycoproteins of RVF virus. Presented is the median (bars) and range (error bars) of number of cells producing IFNγ in an ELISpot assay following restimulation of pooled splenocytes for 18 hours with each of 265 overlapping peptides (each at a final concentration of 5 μg/ml) spanning the entire Gn and Gc glycoprotein from MP-12 RVF virus strain (A). The splenocytes were obtained two weeks post-vaccination with HAdV5-GnGc (N = 5) or HAdV5 lacking a transgenic open reading frame, HAdV5-Empty (N = 5). Only responses exceeding an arbitrary cut-off of >100 SFC/million splenocytes are shown. Responses to all other peptides were below this arbitrary threshold. Numbers in parentheses represent the peptide identification number, with peptides 7, 18, 19, 22, 23 and 62 contained in the Gn glycoprotein and the rest in the Gc glycoprotein. The median frequencies and range of CD8+ and CD4+ T cells staining positive for IFNγ (B), TNFα (C) or IL-2 (D) as measured by ICS on splenocytes is also shown.
Figure 3Induction of T cell responses by ChAdOx1-GnGc and HAdV5-GnGc vaccines. Presented is a summary of the T cell response elicited by each vaccination regimen as measured by ELISpot assay on splenocytes (A; N = 6 mice per regimen) or intracellular cytokine staining of PBMCs (B to E; N = 14 mice per regimen) two weeks post-vaccination. The bars represent medians and error bars, the interquartile ranges. The Mann–Whitney U test is used for statistical comparisons between regimens. The pie charts in E represent the relative contribution of CD8+ T cells staining positive for one cytokine (yellow pie slices), two cytokines (green pie slices) or all three cytokines (red pie slices) to the responses shown in panels B to D. The raw frequencies of the different CD8+ T cell phenotypes are presented in Additional file 1: Figure S2. ** p <0.01, NS – not significant.