| Literature DB >> 25378645 |
Leo Swadling1, Stefania Capone2, Richard D Antrobus3, Anthony Brown1, Rachel Richardson1, Evan W Newell4, John Halliday5, Christabel Kelly5, Dan Bowen1, Joannah Fergusson1, Ayako Kurioka1, Virginia Ammendola2, Mariarosaria Del Sorbo2, Fabiana Grazioli2, Maria Luisa Esposito2, Loredana Siani2, Cinzia Traboni2, Adrian Hill3, Stefano Colloca2, Mark Davis6, Alfredo Nicosia7, Riccardo Cortese8, Antonella Folgori2, Paul Klenerman5, Eleanor Barnes9.
Abstract
A protective vaccine against hepatitis C virus (HCV) remains an unmet clinical need. HCV infects millions of people worldwide and is a leading cause of liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular cancer. Animal challenge experiments, immunogenetics studies, and assessment of host immunity during acute infection highlight the critical role that effective T cell immunity plays in viral control. In this first-in-man study, we have induced antiviral immunity with functional characteristics analogous to those associated with viral control in natural infection, and improved upon a vaccine based on adenoviral vectors alone. We assessed a heterologous prime-boost vaccination strategy based on a replicative defective simian adenoviral vector (ChAd3) and modified vaccinia Ankara (MVA) vector encoding the NS3, NS4, NS5A, and NS5B proteins of HCV genotype 1b. Analysis used single-cell mass cytometry and human leukocyte antigen class I peptide tetramer technology in healthy human volunteers. We show that HCV-specific T cells induced by ChAd3 are optimally boosted with MVA, and generate very high levels of both CD8(+) and CD4(+) HCV-specific T cells targeting multiple HCV antigens. Sustained memory and effector T cell populations are generated, and T cell memory evolved over time with improvement of quality (proliferation and polyfunctionality) after heterologous MVA boost. We have developed an HCV vaccine strategy, with durable, broad, sustained, and balanced T cell responses, characteristic of those associated with viral control, paving the way for the first efficacy studies of a prophylactic HCV vaccine.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25378645 PMCID: PMC4669853 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3009185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956