| Literature DB >> 34213405 |
Patricia Pérez1, Miguel A Martín-Acebes2, Teresa Poderoso3, Adrián Lázaro-Frías1, Juan-Carlos Saiz2, Carlos Óscar S Sorzano4, Mariano Esteban1, Juan García-Arriaza1.
Abstract
Zika virus (ZIKV) is a mosquito-borne pathogen with public health importance due to the high risk of its mosquito vector dissemination and the severe neurological and teratogenic sequelae associated with infection. Vaccines with broad immune specificity and control against this re-emerging virus are needed. Here, we described that mice immunized with a priming dose of a DNA plasmid mammalian expression vector encoding ZIKV prM-E antigens (DNA-ZIKV) followed by a booster dose of a modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) vector expressing the same prM-E ZIKV antigens (MVA-ZIKV) induced broad, polyfunctional and long-lasting ZIKV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell immune responses, with high levels of CD4+ T follicular helper cells, together with the induction of neutralizing antibodies. All those immune parameters were significantly stronger in the heterologous DNA-ZIKV/MVA-ZIKV immunization group compared to the homologous prime/boost immunizations regimens. Collectively, these results provided an optimized immunization protocol able to induce high levels of ZIKV-specific T-cell responses, as well as neutralizing antibodies and reinforce the combined use of DNA-based vectors and MVA-ZIKV as promising prophylactic vaccination schedule against ZIKV.Entities:
Keywords: DNA; MVA; T-cell immune response; ZIKV; mice; neutralizing antibodies; prime/boost; vaccines
Year: 2021 PMID: 34213405 DOI: 10.1080/22221751.2021.1951624
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Microbes Infect ISSN: 2222-1751 Impact factor: 7.163