| Literature DB >> 9176492 |
M D Lubeck1, R Natuk, M Myagkikh, N Kalyan, K Aldrich, F Sinangil, S Alipanah, S C Murthy, P K Chanda, S M Nigida, P D Markham, S Zolla-Pazner, K Steimer, M Wade, M S Reitz, L O Arthur, S Mizutani, A Davis, P P Hung, R C Gallo, J Eichberg, M Robert-Guroff.
Abstract
A combination AIDS vaccine approach consisting of priming with adenovirus-HIV-1MN gp160 recombinants followed by boosting with HIV-1SF2 gp120 was evaluated in chimpanzees. Long-lasting protection, requiring only three immunizations, was achieved against a low-dose challenge with the SF2 strain of HIV-1 and a subsequent high-dose SF2 challenge administered 1 year later without an intervening boost. Notably, neutralizing antibody responses against both clinical and laboratory isolates developed in three chimpanzees and persisted until the time of high-dose challenge. The possibility that cytotoxic T-lymphocytes contribute to low-dose protection of a chimpanzee lacking neutralizing antibodies is suggested. Our results validate the live vector priming/subunit booster approach and should stimulate interest in assessing this combination vaccine approach in humans.Entities:
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Year: 1997 PMID: 9176492 DOI: 10.1038/nm0697-651
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440