| Literature DB >> 30642966 |
Mauricio A Martins1, Georg F Bischof1, Young C Shin1, William A Lauer1, Lucas Gonzalez-Nieto1, David I Watkins1, Eva G Rakasz2, Jeffrey D Lifson3, Ronald C Desrosiers4.
Abstract
The biological characteristics of HIV pose serious difficulties for the success of a preventive vaccine. Molecularly cloned SIVmac239 is difficult for antibodies to neutralize, and a variety of vaccine approaches have had great difficulty achieving protective immunity against it in rhesus monkey models. Here we report significant protection against i.v. acquisition of SIVmac239 using a long-lasting approach to vaccination. The vaccine regimen includes a replication-competent herpesvirus engineered to contain a near-full-length SIV genome that expresses all nine SIV gene products, assembles noninfectious SIV virion particles, and is capable of eliciting long-lasting effector-memory cellular immune responses to all nine SIV gene products. Vaccinated monkeys were significantly protected against acquisition of SIVmac239 following repeated marginal dose i.v. challenges over a 4-month period. Further work is needed to define the critical components necessary for eliciting this protective immunity, evaluate the breadth of the protection against a variety of strains, and explore how this approach may be extended to human use.Entities:
Keywords: AIDS vaccine; DNA electroporation; HIV; SIV; recombinant herpesvirus
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30642966 PMCID: PMC6358712 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1814584116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205