| Literature DB >> 35658899 |
Duckhyang Shin1,2, Younchul Shin1, Eunmi Kim3, Hyojung Nam1, Haiyan Nan1, Jaewoo Lee4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) is a pathogen that causes chickenpox and shingles in humans. Different types of the varicella vaccines derived from the Oka and MAV/06 strains are commercially available worldwide. Although the MAV/06 vaccine was introduced in 1990s, little was known about immunological characteristics.Entities:
Keywords: Cellular immune response; MAV/06 vaccine; Serological cross-reactivity; Varicella zoster virus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35658899 PMCID: PMC9166591 DOI: 10.1186/s12865-022-00503-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Immunol ISSN: 1471-2172 Impact factor: 3.594
Virus isolates used in this study
| Strain name | Strain origin | Clade | Sampling date | Patient information | Accession No | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| YC01 | Zoster | 2 | 19 June 2012 | M, 40 | KJ767491.1 | Kim et al. [ |
| YC02 | Zoster | 2 | 18 July 2012 | M, 3 | KJ767492.1 | Kim et al. [ |
| YC03 | Zoster | 2 | 07 Aug. 2012 | F, 8 | KJ808816.1 | Kim et al. [ |
| YC04 | Zoster | 2 | 02 May 2013 | F, 76 | – | Kim et al. [ |
| YC05 | Zoster | 2 | 01 July 2013 | F, 52 | – | Kim et al. [ |
| YC06 | Zoster | 2 | 09 July 2013 | M, 73 | – | Kim et al. [ |
| YC07 | Zoster | 2 | 22 July 2013 | M, 80 | – | Kim et al. [ |
| YC08 | Zoster | 2 | 24 July 2013 | M, 66 | – | Kim et al. [ |
| Jena 4 (432/2008) | Zoster | 1 | 07 Feb.2008 | M, 57 | JN704695.1 | Sauerbrei et al. [ |
| Jena 6 (1883/2007) | Varicella | 1 | 07 Nov.2007 | F, 4 | JN704694.1 | Sauerbrei et al. [ |
| Jena 12 (2308/2003) | Varicella | 3 | 22 Nov.2003 | F, 5 | JN704699.1 | Sauerbrei et al. [ |
| Jena 16 (52/2007) | Zoster | 3 | 08 Jan.2007 | M, 18 | JN704701.1 | Sauerbrei et al. [ |
| Jena 26 (446/2007) | Varicella | 5 | 15 Mar.2007 | M, 1 | JN704707.1 | Sauerbrei et al. [ |
| MAV/06 | Varicella | 2 | 1989 | M, 3 | JF306641.2 | Lee et al. (2011) |
To demonstrate the cross-reactivity, various strains of wild type VZV were used along with an attenuated type VZV, MAV/06
Fig. 1Evaluation of cross reactivity of antibodies induced by MAV/06 vaccine. Guinea pig (n = 30) were immunized subcutaneously two times at three weeks’ interval with MAV/06 vaccine. Sera were collected by cardiac puncture 3 weeks after second immunization. A PRNT50 titer against multiple VZV isolates (included genetic clade 1–5) were measured by plaque reduction neutralization assay in triplicate. Data are presented as means and standard deviations. B FAMA, which is the gold standard method to detect protective antibody against VZV, were performed once with MRC-5 cell infected with multiple VZV isolates
Fig. 2VZV specific antibody responses after MAV/06 vaccine immunization. Mice were immunized intramuscularly two times at three weeks’ interval. MAV/06 vaccines were prepared with different concentration, and commercialized vaccines for chickenpox and shingles were used as positive control. Mock lysate and PBS were used as negative control. A Sera were collected 3 weeks after first immunization and B 2 weeks after second immunization, and VZV specific antibody were measured with gpELISA. [Vx1: Suduvax, Vx2: Zostavax]. Data are representative of two independent experiments, and presented as means and standard error of the means. ** < 0.01 (ordinary one-way ANOVA). n = 4 mice per group
Fig. 3VZV specific T cell responses after MAV/06 vaccine immunization. Splenocyte were collected from immunized mice with MAV/06 or commercialized vaccines. (A; VZV lysate) Cells were pulsed with VZV virion or (B) recombinant proteins or (C; gE, gI and IE63) overlapping peptides as its component. Interferon-γ secreting T cells were measured by IFN-γ ELISPOT. Spot counts were adjusted by baseline spot with mock-pulsed (mock lysate for VZV lysate, medium for recombinant protein, and DMSO for OLP). [Vx1: Suduvax, Vx2: Zostavax]. Data are presented as means and standard error of the means. * < 0.05 (ordinary one-way ANOVA). n = 4 mice per group
Fig. 4Multiple cytokine analysis of VZV-specific immune cells. Spleen cells were prepared from immunized mice with MAV/06 or commercialized vaccines. Cells were incubated with VZV lysate for 3 days, and supernatants were analyzed with Th1/Th2/Th17 cytokine bead array. Cytokine profiles were adjusted by subtracting result of mock lysate stimulated cell. Data are presented as means and standard deviations. *** < 0.005 (ordinary one-way ANOVA). n = 4 mice per group