| Literature DB >> 33398289 |
Kevin O Saunders, Norbert Pardi, Robert Parks, Sampa Santra, Zekun Mu, Laura Sutherland, Richard Scearce, Maggie Barr, Amanda Eaton, Giovanna Hernandez, Derrick Goodman, Michael J Hogan, Istvan Tombacz, David N Gordon, R Wes Rountree, Yunfei Wang, Mark G Lewis, Theodore C Pierson, Chris Barbosa, Ying Tam, Xiaoying Shen, Guido Ferrari, Georgia D Tomaras, David C Montefiori, Drew Weissman, Barton F Haynes.
Abstract
Development of an effective AIDS vaccine remains a challenge. Nucleoside-modified mRNAs formulated in lipid nanoparticles (mRNA-LNP) have proved to be a potent mode of immunization against infectious diseases in preclinical studies, and are being tested for SARS-CoV-2 in humans. A critical question is how mRNA-LNP vaccine immunogenicity compares to that of traditional adjuvanted protein vaccines in primates. Here, we found that mRNA-LNP immunization compared to protein immunization elicited either the same or superior magnitude and breadth of HIV-1 Env-specific polyfunctional antibodies. Immunization with mRNA-LNP encoding Zika premembrane and envelope (prM-E) or HIV-1 Env gp160 induced durable neutralizing antibodies for at least 41 weeks. Doses of mRNA-LNP as low as 5 μg were immunogenic in macaques. Thus, mRNA-LNP can be used to rapidly generate single or multi-component vaccines, such as sequential vaccines needed to protect against HIV-1 infection. Such vaccines would be as or more immunogenic than adjuvanted recombinant protein vaccines in primates.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33398289 PMCID: PMC7781333 DOI: 10.1101/2020.12.30.424745
Source DB: PubMed Journal: bioRxiv