| Literature DB >> 27591322 |
Shari N Gordon1, Namal P M Liyanage1, Melvin N Doster1, Monica Vaccari1, Diego A Vargas-Inchaustegui2, Poonam Pegu1, Luca Schifanella1, Xiaoying Shen3, Georgia D Tomaras3, Mangala Rao4, Erik A Billings4, Jennifer Schwartz5, Ilia Prado5, Kathryn Bobb5, Wenlei Zhang5, David C Montefiori3, Kathryn E Foulds6, Guido Ferrari3, Marjorie Robert-Guroff2, Mario Roederer6, Tran B Phan7, Donald N Forthal7, Donald M Stablein8, Sanjay Phogat9, David J Venzon10, Timothy Fouts5, Genoveffa Franchini11.
Abstract
The recombinant ALVAC vaccine coupled with the monomeric gp120/alum protein have decreased the risk of HIV and SIV acquisition. Ab responses to the V1/V2 regions have correlated with a decreased risk of virus acquisition in both humans and macaques. We hypothesized that the breadth and functional profile of Abs induced by an ALVAC/envelope protein regimen could be improved by substituting the monomeric gp120 boost, with the full-length single-chain (FLSC) protein. FLSC is a CD4-gp120 fusion immunogen that exposes cryptic gp120 epitopes to the immune system. We compared the immunogenicity and relative efficiency of an ALVAC-SIV vaccine boosted either with bivalent FLSC proteins or with monomeric gp120 in alum. FLSC was superior to monomeric gp120 in directing Abs to the C3 α2 helix, the V5 loop, and the V3 region that contains the putative CCR5 binding site. In addition, FLSC boosting elicited significantly higher binding Abs to V2 and increased both the Ab-dependent cellular cytotoxicity activity and the breadth of neutralizing Abs. However, the FLSC vaccine regimen demonstrated only a trend in vaccine efficacy, whereas the monomeric gp120 regimen significantly decreased the risk of SIVmac251 acquisition. In both vaccine regimens, anti-V2 Abs correlated with a decreased risk of virus acquisition but differed with regard to systemic or mucosal origin. In the FLSC regimen, serum Abs to V2 correlated, whereas in the monomeric gp120 regimen, V2 Abs in rectal secretions, the site of viral challenge, were associated with efficacy.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27591322 PMCID: PMC5026031 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1600674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422