| Literature DB >> 34046030 |
Pinyi Lu1,2, Dylan J Guerin3, Shu Lin3, Sidhartha Chaudhury4, Margaret E Ackerman3, Diane L Bolton2,5, Anders Wallqvist1.
Abstract
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection remains a major public health threat due to its incurable nature and the lack of a highly efficacious vaccine. The RV144 vaccine trial is the only clinical study to date that demonstrated significant but modest decrease in HIV infection risk. To improve HIV-1 vaccine immunogenicity and efficacy, we recently evaluated pox-protein vaccination using a next generation liposome-based adjuvant, Army Liposomal Formulation adsorbed to aluminum (ALFA), in rhesus monkeys and observed 90% efficacy against limiting dose mucosal SHIV challenge in male animals. Here, we analyzed binding antibody responses, as assessed by Fc array profiling using a broad range of HIV-1 envelope antigens and Fc features, to explore the mechanisms of ALFA-mediated protection by employing machine learning and Cox proportional hazards regression analyses. We found that Fcγ receptor 2a-related binding antibody responses were augmented by ALFA relative to aluminium hydroxide, and these responses were associated with reduced risk of infection in male animals. Our results highlight the application of systems serology to provide mechanistic insights to vaccine-elicited protection and support evidence that antibody effector responses protect against HIV-1 infection.Entities:
Keywords: Fc receptor; adjuvanted HIV-1 vaccine; immune correlate; rhesus macaque; systems serology
Year: 2021 PMID: 34046030 PMCID: PMC8144500 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.625030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Data analysis pipeline.
Figure 2Vaccine-elicited and Fc-mediated effector function. (A) Heat map for all Fc array measurements performed on all 48 study animals (rows) at each study time point by HIV-1 Env antigen and immune features (columns). (B) Fc features of vaccine-elicited immune responses at 12.5 months post-vaccination. (C) Principal component analysis on vaccine-elicited immune responses at 12.5 months post-vaccination by active vaccine group.
Figure 3Vaccine-elicited immune responses that vary by adjuvant. (A–J) Vaccine-elicited binding antibody responses differing between the ALFA and alum active arms are shown for each Fc detection reagent and HIV-1 Env antigen combination. MFI, median fluorescence intensity. (K) Principal component analysis on adjuvant-associated immune responses.
Figure 4Random forest models revealing individual level differences between ALFA and alum. (A) Prediction accuracy, kappa, and confusion matrices. The rows of confusion matrices represent the predicted adjuvant arms, whereas the columns indicate the actual adjuvant arms. (B) Comparison of AUCROC values from 100 repetitions of 100 times repeated 5-fold cross-validation using actual (blue) versus permutated (yellow) adjuvant labels. Dashed line represented the mean AUCROC values. (C) Immune feature importance in random forest models. (D) Hierarchical clustering on immune features used in random forest models. (E) Cox regression analysis on three most important immune features identified by random forest models.
Figure 5Sex-specific efficacy and vaccine-elicited immune responses. (A) Cox regression analysis for Male and Female subjects on three most important immune features identified by random forest models. (B–D) Vaccine-elicited immune responses of Male subjects in the ALFA arm. (E–G) Vaccine-elicited immune responses of Female subjects in the ALFA arm. MFI, Median Fluorescence Intensity.