Evaluation in Rhesus Macaques of Tat and Rev-Targeted Immunization as a Preventive Vaccine against Mucosal Challenge with SHIV-BX08
- 1 September 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in DNA and Cell Biology
- Vol. 21 (9) , 653-658
- https://doi.org/10.1089/104454902760330183
Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that a CD8-mediated cytotoxic T-cell response against the regulatory proteins of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) may control infection after pathogenic virus challenge. Here, we evaluated whether vaccination with Tat or Tat and Rev could significantly reduce viral load in nonhuman primates. Rhesus macaques were primed with Semliki forest Virus (SFV) expressing HIV-1 tat (SFV-tat) and HIV-1 rev (SFV-rev) and boosted with modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) expressing tat and rev. A second group of monkey was primed with SFV-tat only and boosted with MVA-tat. A third group received a tat and rev DNA/MVA prime-boost vaccine regimen. Monitoring of anti-Tat and anti-Rev antibody responses or antigen-specific IFN-γ production, as measured by enzyme-linked immunospot assays revealed no clear differences between the three groups. These results suggest that priming with either DNA or SFV seemed to be equivalent, but the additive or synergistic effect of a rev vaccine could not be clearly established. The animals were challenged by the rectal route 9 weeks after the last booster immunization, using 10 MID50 of a SHIV-BX08 stock. Postchallenge follow-up of the monkeys included testing seroconversion to Gag and Env antigens, measuring virus infectivity in PBMC by cocultivation with noninfected human cells, and monitoring of plasma viral load. None of the animals was protected from infection as assessed by PCR, but peak viremia was reduced more than 200-fold compared to sham controls in one third (6/18) of vaccinated macaques, whatever the vaccine regimen they received. Interestingly, among these six protected animals four did not seroconvert. Altogether, these results clearly indicated that the addition of early HIV proteins like Tat and Rev in a multicomponent preventive vaccine including structural proteins like Env or Gag may be beneficial in preventive vaccinal strategies.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Outcome of Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Strain 89.6p Challenge following Vaccination of Rhesus Macaques with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Tat ProteinJournal of Virology, 2002
- Replication-incompetent adenoviral vaccine vector elicits effective anti-immunodeficiency-virus immunityNature, 2002
- HIV-1 Tat vaccinesVirus Research, 2001
- Control of a Mucosal Challenge and Prevention of AIDS by a Multiprotein DNA/MVA VaccineScience, 2001
- Control of Viremia and Prevention of Clinical AIDS in Rhesus Monkeys by Cytokine-Augmented DNA VaccinationScience, 2000
- SHIV89.6P pathogenicity in cynomolgus monkeys and control of viral replication and disease onset by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Tat vaccineJournal of Medical Primatology, 2000
- Generation of CD8+T Cell-Generated Suppressor Factor andbeta-Chemokines by Targeted Iliac Lymph Node Immunization in Rhesus Monkeys Challenged with SHIV-89.6P by the Rectal RouteAIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 2000
- β-Chemokines and neutralizing antibody titers correlate with sterilizing immunity generated in HIV-1 vaccinated macaquesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1998
- Protective mucosal immunity elicited by targeted iliac lymph node immunization with a subunit SIV envelope and core vaccine in macaquesNature Medicine, 1996
- Statistical analysis of sparse infection data and its implications for retroviral treatment trials in primates.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1992