Fragmentation of SIV-gag Vaccine Induces Broader T Cell Responses

Adel Benlahrech, Andrea Meiser, Shanthi Herath, Timos Papagatsias, Takis Athanasopoulos, Fucheng Li, Steve Self, Veronique Bachy, Catherine Hervouet, Karen Logan, Linda Klavinskis, George Dickson, Steven Patterson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background
High mutation rates of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) allows escape from T cell recognition preventing development of effective T cell vaccines. Vaccines that induce diverse T cell immune responses would help overcome this problem. Using SIV gag as a model vaccine, we investigated two approaches to increase the breadth of the CD8 T cell response. Namely, fusion of vaccine genes to ubiquitin to target the proteasome and increase levels of MHC class I peptide complexes and gene fragmentation to overcome competition between epitopes for presentation and recognition.

Methodology/Principal Findings
Three vaccines were compared: full-length unmodified SIV-mac239 gag, full-length gag fused at the N-terminus to ubiquitin and 7 gag fragments of equal size spanning the whole of gag with ubiquitin-fused to the N-terminus of each fragment. Genes were cloned into a replication defective adenovirus vector and immunogenicity assessed in an in vitro human priming system. The breadth of the CD8 T cell response, defined by the number of distinct epitopes, was assessed by IFN-γ-ELISPOT and memory phenotype and cytokine production evaluated by flow cytometry. We observed an increase of two- to six-fold in the number of epitopes recognised in the ubiquitin-fused fragments compared to the ubiquitin-fused full-length gag. In contrast, although proteasomal targeting was achieved, there was a marked reduction in the number of epitopes recognised in the ubiquitin-fused full-length gag compared to the full-length unmodified gene, but there were no differences in the number of epitope responses induced by non-ubiquitinated full-length gag and the ubiquitin-fused mini genes. Fragmentation and ubiquitination did not affect T cell memory differentiation and polyfunctionality, though most responses were directed against the Ad5 vector.

Conclusion/Significance
Fragmentation but not fusion with ubiquitin increases the breadth of the CD8 T vaccine response against SIV-mac239 gag. Thus gene fragmentation of HIV vaccines may maximise responses.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere48038
Pages (from-to)-
JournalPL o S One
Volume7
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 Oct 2012

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Fragmentation of SIV-gag Vaccine Induces Broader T Cell Responses'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this