| Literature DB >> 26344890 |
Minoru Kidokoro1, Hisatoshi Shida2.
Abstract
The LC16m8 strain of vaccinia virus, the active ingredient in the Japanese smallpox vaccine, was derived from the Lister/Elstree strain. LC16m8 is replication-competent and has been administered to over 100,000 infants and 3,000 adults with no serious adverse reactions. Despite this outstanding safety profile, the occurrence of spontaneously-generated large plaque-forming virulent LC16m8 revertants following passage in cell culture is a major drawback. We identified the gene responsible for the reversion and deleted the gene (B5R) from LC16m8 to derive LC16m8Δ. LC16m8∆ is non-pathogenic in immunodeficient severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mice, genetically-stable and does not reverse to a large-plaque phenotype upon passage in cell culture, even under conditions in which most LC16m8 populations are replaced by revertants. Moreover, LC16m8∆ is >500-fold more effective than the non-replicating vaccinia virus (VV), Modified Vaccinia Ankara (MVA), at inducing murine immune responses against pathogenic VV. LC16m8∆, which expresses the SIV gag gene, also induced anti-Gag CD8⁺ T-cells more efficiently than MVA and another non-replicating VV, Dairen I minute-pock variants (DIs). Moreover, LC16m8∆ expressing HIV-1 Env in combination with a Sendai virus vector induced the production of anti-Env antibodies and CD8⁺ T-cells. Thus, the safety and efficacy of LC16m8∆ mean that it represents an outstanding platform for the development of human vaccine vectors.Entities:
Keywords: B5R; DIs; HIV; LC16m8; LC16m8∆; MVA; SIV; reversion; vaccinia virus
Year: 2014 PMID: 26344890 PMCID: PMC4494248 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines2040755
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Smallpox vaccines and candidate vaccines classified according to generation.
| Generation | Product | Platform | Parental Strain |
|---|---|---|---|
| First-generation | Lister/Elstree | Lymph-derived | Lister/Elstree |
| Dryvax | Lymph-derived | NYCBH a | |
| Ikeda | Lymph-derived | Ikeda | |
| Dairen I | Lymph-derived | Dairen I | |
| Second-generation | ACAM1000 | Clonal virus grown in MRC-5 cells |
|
| ACAM2000 | Clonal virus grown in Vero cells | ACAM1000 | |
| Elstree-BN | Lister/Elstree lymph-derived virus passaged in CEF b | Lister/Elstree | |
| CCSV | NYCBH lymph-derived virus passaged in MRC-5 cells | NYCBH | |
| Third-generation | LC16m8 c | Minute-pock-forming, temperature-sensitive variant virus | Lister/Elstree |
| IMVAMUNE (MVA d) | MVA571 additionally passaged in CEF | MVA571 | |
| DIs e | Minute-pock-forming variant virus passaged in eggs | Dairen I | |
| Fourth-generation | LC16m8∆ | Derived from LC16m8 by deleting the | LC16m8 |
| NYVAC | Attenuated clonal Copenhagen strain generated by deleting 18 non-essential genes | Copenhagen |
a New York City Board of Health; b chicken embryo fibroblast; c Lister Clone 16m8; d Modified Vaccinia Ankara; e Dairen I minute-pock variants.
Figure 1Pathogenicity of B5R-defective viruses in severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mice. Figure modified from Kidokoro et al. [34].
Figure 2Genetic stability of LC16m8∆ and LC16m8 upon serial passage in primary rabbit kidney cells at different temperatures (30 °C or 34 °C). Figure modified from Kidokoro et al. [34]. LPC, large-plaque-forming clone.
Figure 3(A) Protective immune responses induced by m8∆ and derivative viruses in mice. (A–F) Average body weight of mice immunized (intramuscularly) with (104–106 PFU) vaccinia viruses (VVs) and then challenged intranasally with the Western Reserve (WR) strain. Crosses denote mice that either died or were sacrificed because they lost >30% of their body weight. Figure modified from Kidokoro et al. [34].