Human adenovirus-specific T cells modulate HIV-specific T cell responses to an Ad5-vectored HIV-1 vaccine
Open Access
- 3 January 2012
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 122 (1) , 359-367
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci60202
Abstract
Recombinant viruses hold promise as vectors for vaccines to prevent infectious diseases with significant global health impacts. One of their major limitations is that preexisting anti-vector neutralizing antibodies can reduce T cell responses to the insert antigens; however, the impact of vector-specific cellular immunity on subsequent insert-specific T cell responses has not been assessed in humans. Here, we have identified and compared adenovirus-specific and HIV-specific T cell responses in subjects participating in two HIV-1 vaccine trials using a vaccine vectored by adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5). Higher frequencies of pre-immunization adenovirus-specific CD4+ T cells were associated with substantially decreased magnitude of HIV-specific CD4+ T cell responses and decreased breadth of HIV-specific CD8+ T cell responses in vaccine recipients, independent of type-specific preexisting Ad5-specific neutralizing antibody titers. Further, epitopes recognized by adenovirus-specific T cells were commonly conserved across many adenovirus serotypes, suggesting that cross-reactivity of preexisting adenovirus-specific T cells can extend to adenovirus vectors derived from rare serotypes. These findings provide what we believe to be a new understanding of how preexisting viral immunity may impact the efficacy of vaccines under current evaluation for prevention of HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Novel adenovirus vector-based vaccines for HIV-1Current Opinion in HIV and AIDS, 2010
- Adenovirus-specific immunity after immunization with an Ad5 HIV-1 vaccine candidate in humansNature Medicine, 2009
- Baseline Ad5 serostatus does not predict Ad5 HIV vaccine–induced expansion of adenovirus-specific CD4+ T cellsNature Medicine, 2009
- Replication-Defective Adenovirus Vectors with Multiple Deletions Do Not Induce Measurable Vector-Specific T Cells in Human TrialsJournal of Virology, 2009
- Host Immune Responses to Chronic Adenovirus Infections in Human and Nonhuman PrimatesJournal of Virology, 2009
- HIV-1 vaccine-induced immunity in the test-of-concept Step Study: a case–cohort analysisThe Lancet, 2008
- Efficacy assessment of a cell-mediated immunity HIV-1 vaccine (the Step Study): a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, test-of-concept trialPublished by Elsevier ,2008
- Optimization and validation of an 8-color intracellular cytokine staining (ICS) assay to quantify antigen-specific T cells induced by vaccinationJournal of Immunological Methods, 2007
- Phase 1 Safety and Immunogenicity Evaluation of a Multiclade HIV‐1 Candidate Vaccine Delivered by a Replication‐Defective Recombinant Adenovirus VectorThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2006
- A new look at the statistical model identificationIEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, 1974