Mucosal Priming with a Recombinant Influenza A Virus-Vectored Vaccine Elicits T-Cell and Antibody Responses to HIV-1 in Mice

Autor: Ping He, Ying Feng, Ting Li, Caijun Sun, Liqiang Feng, Xuehua Zheng, Jinlin Wang, Fengyu Hu, Min Liao, Ling Chen, X.L. Ye, Feng Li, Weiqi Deng, Lujie Han, Tao Shu, Pingchao Li, Yali Zheng
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
viruses
HIV Core Protein p24
HIV Infections
CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes
HIV Antibodies
Antibodies
Viral

medicine.disease_cause
Epitope
Mice
Immunogenicity
Vaccine

Influenza A Virus
H1N1 Subtype

0302 clinical medicine
Influenza A virus
030212 general & internal medicine
AIDS Vaccines
Immunity
Cellular

Mice
Inbred BALB C

Vaccines
Synthetic

0303 health sciences
biology
Vaccination
virus diseases
Genes
gag

medicine.anatomical_structure
Female
Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid
Lymphoid Tissue
T cell
Immunology
Immunization
Secondary

Microbiology
Virus
Adenoviridae
Viral vector
03 medical and health sciences
Immune system
Antigen
Virology
Vaccines and Antiviral Agents
medicine
Animals
Immunity
Mucosal

030304 developmental biology
Influenza A Virus
H3N2 Subtype

Immunoglobulin A
Immunoglobulin G
Insect Science
HIV-1
biology.protein
Neuraminidase
Zdroj: J Virol
ISSN: 1098-5514
0022-538X
DOI: 10.1128/jvi.00059-21
Popis: Recombinant influenza A viral (IAV) vectors are potential to stimulate systemic and mucosal immunity, but the packaging capacity is limited and only one or a few epitopes can be carried. Here, we report the generation of a replication-competent IAV vector that carries a full-length HIV-1 p24 gene linked to the 5′-terminal coding region of the neuraminidase segment via a protease cleavage sequence (IAV-p24). IAV-p24 was successfully rescued and stably propagated, and P24 protein was efficiently expressed in infected mammalian cells. In BALB/c mice, IAV-p24 showed attenuated pathogenicity compared to that of the parental A/PR/8/34 (H1N1) virus. An intranasal inoculation with IAV-p24 elicited moderate HIV-specific cell-mediated immune (CMI) responses in the airway and vaginal tracts and in the spleen, and an intranasal boost with a replication-incompetent adenovirus type 2 vector expressing the HIV-1 gag gene (Ad2-gag) greatly improved these responses. Importantly, compared to an Ad2-gag prime plus IAV-p24 boost regimen, the IAV-p24 prime plus Ad2-gag boost regimen had a greater efficacy in eliciting HIV-specific CMI responses. P24-specific CD8(+) T cells and antibodies were robustly provoked both systemically and in mucosal sites and showed long-term durability, revealing that IAV-p24 may be used as a mucosa-targeted priming vaccine. Our results illustrate that IAV-p24 is able to prime systemic and mucosal immunity against HIV-1 and warrants further evaluation in nonhuman primates. IMPORTANCE An effective HIV-1 vaccine remains elusive despite nearly 40 years of research. CD8(+) T cells and protective antibodies may both be desirable for preventing HIV-1 infection in susceptible mucosal sites. Recombinant influenza A virus (IAV) vector has the potential to stimulate these immune responses, but the packaging capacity is extremely limited. Here, we describe a replication-competent IAV vector expressing the HIV-1 p24 gene (IAV-p24). Unlike most other IAV vectors that carried one or several antigenic epitopes, IAV-p24 stably expressed the full-length P24 protein, which contains multiple epitopes and is highly conserved among all known HIV-1 sequences. Compared to the parental A/PR/8/34 (H1N1) virus, IAV-p24 showed an attenuated pathogenicity in BALB/c mice. When combined with an adenovirus vector expressing the HIV-1 gag gene, IAV-p24 was able to prime P24-specific systemic and mucosal immune responses. IAV-p24 as an alternative priming vaccine against HIV-1 warrants further evaluation in nonhuman primates.
Databáze: OpenAIRE