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Journal of Virology, September 1999, p. 7524-7532, Vol. 73, No. 9
Institute of Molecular Medicine,
Received 8 April 1999/Accepted 16 June 1999
DNA and modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) are vaccine vehicles
suitable and safe for use in humans. Here, by using a multicytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) epitope gene and a DNA prime-MVA boost vaccination regimen, high levels of CTLs specific for a single simian
immunodeficiency virus (SIV) gag-derived epitope were
elicited in rhesus macaques. These vaccine-induced CTLs were capable of
killing SIV-infected cells in vitro. Fluorescence-activated cell sorter
analysis using soluble tetrameric major histocompatibility
complex-peptide complexes showed that the vaccinated animals had 1 to
5% circulating CD8+ lymphocytes specific for the vaccine
epitope, frequencies comparable to those in SIV-infected monkeys. Upon
intrarectal challenge with pathogenic SIVmac251, no evidence for
protection was observed in at least two of the three vaccinated
animals. This study does not attempt to define correlates of protective
immunity nor design a protective vaccine against immunodeficiency
viruses, but it demonstrates clearly that the DNA prime-MVA boost
regimen is an effective protocol for induction of CTLs in macaques. It
also shows that powerful tools for studying the role of CTLs in the control of SIV and human immunodeficiency virus infections are now
available: epitope-based vaccines, a protocol for an effective induction of CTLs in primates, and a simple and sensitive method for
quantitation of epitope-specific T cells. The advantages of the DNA
prime-MVA boost regimen as well as the correlations of tetramer
staining of peripheral blood lymphocytes with CTL killing in vitro and
postchallenge control of viremia are discussed.
Because a safe and effective vaccine
remains the best hope for controlling the human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV) pandemic, the development and testing of vaccines are some of the
primary objectives of AIDS research. The work presented here is a part of a long-term effort to develop an HIV vaccine with a particular emphasis on the induction of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs). This is
because there is growing evidence that CTLs are an important component
of the host antiviral response (9-11, 28, 37, 39, 47, 53, 58-60,
69). Identification of vaccines that induce strong CTL responses
would assist in further advancing our understanding of the protective
role(s) that these cells play in the fight against HIV infection.
Furthermore, a reliable and effective method for CTL induction in
primates would be of a great value to vaccine development in general.
Central to the evaluation of new vaccine strategies is the use of
animal models. Vaccination of experimental animals permits important
aspects of vaccine design and vaccination regimens to be addressed in a
faster and cheaper way than human trials, and it ultimately provides a
basis for a more effective planning of clinical trials. For HIV
infection and AIDS, infection of nonhuman primates with
immunodeficiency viruses offers a spectrum of models in terms of
disease severity and difficulty in preventing virus infection. These
models range from the infection of chimpanzees with HIV-1 SF2, a model
in which neutralizing antibodies provide protection (6, 19,
26), to infection of rhesus macaques with simian immunodeficiency
virus SIVmac, in which a role for cell-mediated immune responses in
partial or complete protection is strongly supported (18, 23, 33,
42, 54). In turn, only results from clinical trials will show
which of these monkey models is the closest to HIV infection of humans.
Recent advances in biotechnology have provided new tools for
quantitation of the epitope-specific T-cell responses. Not long ago,
detection of specific CTLs relied on standard 51Cr-release
and limiting dilution assays (LDAs), which required antigen-driven
expansion of T cells in vitro. These methods have tended to
underestimate the numbers of CTLs. In contrast, the use of
fluorochrome-labelled tetrameric major histocompatibility complex (MHC)
class I-peptide complexes in fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS)
analysis with a FACScan flow cytometer allows direct determination
of MHC-peptide-specific T cells in fresh unrestimulated blood
(3). This technique and the gamma interferon-based enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) assay (44) have revealed impressive T-cell responses to viral infections reflected in
frequencies of virus-specific CD8+ T cells 50 to 500 times
higher than that estimated originally by LDA. Thus, around 2% of
circulating CD8+ T cells were HIV specific in many
individuals infected with HIV (47), and up to 10% of
CD8+ T cells recognized an SIV-derived epitope during
persistent SIV infection of macaques (40). Here, the
tetramer technology is used for the quantitation of CTL responses
induced by vaccination of macaques.
The immunogen tested in this study was constructed as a string of 24 epitopes derived from HIV and SIV proteins recognized by murine,
macaque, and human CTLs (32). Consequently, the same vaccines can be tested for the induction of the CTL responses in mice,
monkeys, and humans. This immunogen was expressed from plasmid pTH DNA
and modified virus Ankara (MVA; an attenuated vaccinia virus), i.e.,
vaccine vehicles that are safe and acceptable for use in humans. While
both vaccines were shown to be immunogenic in mice in their own right
(30-32), the most potent protocol for induction of CTLs was
found to be the DNA prime-MVA boost regimen (29). This was
the only protocol that fully protected mice in a malaria vaccine trial
(61). Some past vaccination strategies were highly
immunogenic in mice, but failed to induce comparable CTL responses in
humans (72); therefore, it was important to assess the
immunogenicity of the DNA prime-MVA boost regimen in nonhuman primates
prior to clinical trials. Here, data are presented which demonstrate
that this vaccination regimen induced high levels of SIV-specific
CD8+ lymphocytes in the circulation of all immunized rhesus
macaques. However, strong responses against this epitope did not
protect at least two of three vaccinees against a rigorous mucosal challenge.
Cells.
Chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEFs) were maintained in
Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (Gibco) supplemented with 10%
fetal bovine serum (FBS; Gibco), 2 mM L-glutamine, and
penicillin-streptomycin. B-lymphoblastoid cell lines (B-LCLs) were
grown in R20 medium (RPMI 1640 supplemented with 20% FBS, 2 mM
L-glutamine, and penicillin-streptomycin). All cells were
cultured in a humidified incubator in 5% CO2 at 37°C.
Tissue typing of macaques by sequence-specific primer (SSP)-PCR
and direct sequencing.
Genomic DNA was prepared from whole
peripheral blood by using a Puregene DNA isolation kit (Gentra Systems)
according to the manufacturer's protocol, and the Mamu-A*01
alleles were identified as described previously (38).
Briefly, the Mamu-A*01-alleles were amplified by PCR from 50 to 150 ng of genomic DNA by using allele-specific primers, and positive
PCR products were identified on a 1% agarose gel. Positive samples
were incubated with shrimp alkaline phosphatase (AP) and exonuclease I
to remove unincorporated deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs) and
residual single-stranded PCR primers, respectively (U.S. Biochemicals,
Cleveland, Ohio) and then were heat inactivated. The enzyme-treated,
heat-inactivated PCR products were sequenced with sequencing primers
and the Taq FS DyeDeoxy Terminator Cycle Sequencing kit
(Perkin-Elmer), and the samples were analyzed with an ABI 373 automated
DNA sequencer.
Preparation of the pTH.HW DNA vaccine and immunization.
The
H immunogen expressed from the multiepitope DNA and MVA vaccines
(32) contained an SIV gag-derived epitope,
TPYDINQML, recognized by CTLs in rhesus macaques (Macaca
mulatta) in the context of the Mamu-A*01 MHC class I molecule
(13, 43). However, detailed characterization of the
Mamu-A*01-bound peptides revealed that the optimal binding peptide was
actually CTPYDINQM (p11C, C-M) (1). Therefore, both the DNA
and MVA vaccines used in this study were corrected by an insertion of
nucleotide sequence 5'-GCT AGC TTC GAA TTC GCT GCC TGC into position
133 of the H gene open reading frame and were designated pTH.HW and
MVA.HW, respectively. The pTH.HW DNA was prepared with the EndoFree
Plasmid Maxi kit (Qiagen) according to the vendor's protocol.
Cartridges for the gene gun-mediated delivery containing gold particles
coated with the pTH.HW plasmid DNA were prepared as described
previously (31).
Preparation of the MVA.HW vaccine and immunization.
Recombinant MVA.HW was generated as described previously
(30). The HW polyepitope gene was ligated into plasmid
pMCO3, which directed the HW gene into the deletion III locus of MVA
(12). Bulk stocks of the recombinant MVA were grown on
primary CEFs obtained from the eggs of a specific pathogen-free flock.
MVA was purified by centrifugation of cytoplasmic extracts through a
36% (wt/vol) sucrose cushion in a Beckman SW28 rotor at 13,500 rpm for
80 min. The virus stock titers were determined by immunostaining of CEF monolayers.
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Effective Induction of Simian Immunodeficiency
Virus-Specific Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes in Macaques by Using a
Multiepitope Gene and DNA Prime-Modified Vaccinia Virus Ankara Boost
Vaccination Regimen

Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 537154
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Bulk CTL cultures, CTL lines, and a standard 51Cr-release assay. Monkey peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) were isolated with a Lymphoprep cushion (Nycomed Pharma As). For peptide restimulation of CTLs in vitro, 8 × 106 freshly isolated purified PBLs were incubated with 10 µM peptide in 100 µl of R20 in 5% CO2 at 37°C for 1 h and resuspended in a total of 4 ml of R20 supplemented with 25 ng of human interleukin-7 (IL-7) per ml in two 24-well-plate wells. On day 3, Lymphocult-T (Biotest AG) was added to a final concentration of 10% (vol/vol). On day 8, 5 × 106 peptide-pulsed irradiated autologous B-LCL cells were added to the cultures, followed by Lymphocult-T on day 11. Cytolytic tests were carried out on day 14. CTL lines were maintained by weekly peptide-pulsed irradiated B-LCL-Lymphocult-T restimulations.
In a 51Cr-release assay, the effector cells were diluted sequentially twofold in U-bottom wells (96-well plate; Costar) at effector/target ratios indicated in the figures. Five thousand 51Cr-labelled autologous B-LCL cells, pulsed (2 µg/ml) or unpulsed with peptide, were added to the effectors and incubated at 37°C for 6 h. Alternatively, autologous PBLs, which had been incubated for 6 days with phytohemagglutinin (PHA), were infected with SIVmacJ5 overnight, peptide pulsed or untreated, and used as targets. Spontaneous and total chromium releases were estimated from wells in which the target cells were kept in a medium alone or 5% Triton X-100, respectively. Percent specific lysis was calculated as [(sample release
spontaneous release)/(total release
spontaneous
release)] × 100. The spontaneous release for all samples was below
20% of the total counts.
Preparation of soluble tetrameric MHC-peptide complexes.
DNA
coding for the signal peptide-negative extracellular domains of the
Mamu-A*01 MHC class I heavy chain was amplified by PCR from cDNA with
the 5' primer MamuNdeI (5'-CCT GAC TCA GAC CAT ATG GGC TCT CAC TCC ATG)
and the 3' primer 5'-G TGA TAA GCT TAA CGA TGA TTC CA CAC CAT TTT CTG
TGC ATC CAG AAT ATG ATG CAG GGA TCC CTC CCA TCT CAG GGT GAG GGG C. The
former primer contained a site for restriction endonuclease
NdeI, and the latter included a HindIII site
and coded for the peptide substrate for the biotin protein ligase
enzyme BirA. The PCR product was digested with NdeI and
HindIII and inserted into the same sites in the
polylinker of bacterial expression vector pGMT7. The rhesus monkey gene
coding for a signal peptide-negative
2-microglobulin was
amplified by PCR from a cDNA clone by using primers B2MBACK
(5'-TCA GAC CAT ATG TCT CGC TCC GTG GCC) and B2MFOR (5'-TCA
GAC AAG CTT TTA CAT GTC TCG ATC CCA C) and likewise cloned into the
NdeI and HindIII sites of pGMT7. Both chains
were expressed in Escherichia coli BL-21, purified from
inclusion bodies, denatured in 8 M urea, and refolded in the presence
of peptide CTPYDINQM (1); biotinylated with the BirA enzyme
(Avidity); and purified on fast-performance liquid chromatography and
MonoQ ion-exchange columns. The amount of biotinylated refolded
MHC-peptide complexes was estimated in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent
assay, whereby monomeric complexes were first captured by
conformation-sensitive monoclonal antibody (MAb) W6/32 and detected by
AP-conjugated streptavidin (Sigma) followed by a colorimetric reagent
for AP. The formation of tetrameric complexes was induced by addition
of phycoerythrin (PE)-conjugated streptavidin (ExtrAvidin; Sigma) to
the refolded biotinylated monomers at a molar ratio of MHC-peptide
monomer-PE-streptavidin of 4:1. Streptavidin was added in 1/10 of the
final amount separated by a 20-min incubation at 4°C. PE-tetrameric
complexes were stored in the dark at 4°C until use.
FACS analysis.
Aliquots of Lymphoprep cushion-isolated PBLs
were stored at
70°C until use. On the day of analysis, PBLs were
thawed, washed once with PBA (PBS, 1% bovine serum albumin, 0.1%
sodium azide), incubated with 1 µg of PE-conjugated tetrameric
Mamu-A*01-Gag peptide complexes, first at 4°C for 20 min and then on
ice for 5 min. One microgram of Tri-color-conjugated antihuman CD8 MAb (Caltag) was added, and this mixture was then incubated with the cells
on ice for 20 min. Cells were washed twice with PBA before being fixed
in formaldehyde (PBS, 1% paraformaldehyde, 2.5% FBS). Two-color
cytofluorometric analysis was performed with a Becton Dickinson FACS.
Voltage and compensation levels were determined by using both unstained
lymphocytes for setting the background levels of fluorescence to the
first log of the scale and single PE- and Tri-color-stained lymphocytes
for adjusting the spectral overlap. All time points from each animals
were analyzed with the same FACS settings. A gate was applied to the
live lymphocytes. Data analysis and presentation were done with the
CellQuest software (Becton Dickinson).
SIV challenge. Animals were challenged intrarectally (i.r.) with 20 i.r. median infectious doses of cell supernatant of pathogenic SIVmac251 grown in simian PBLs kindly provided by A.-M. Aubertin, Université Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg, France.
Plasma RNA load. The number of SIV genome equivalents per 1 ml of peripheral blood was determined by quantitative competitive reverse transcription (RT)-PCR method as described before (66). A calibrated amount of internal standard RNA was added to and copurified with the sample RNA to be analyzed before RNA purification to compensate for sample degradation and amplification efficiency. The limit of detection was 40 genome equivalents per ml of plasma.
Cell-associated virus load. Freshly Lymphoprep-separated lymphocytes were cocultivated in duplicates with the human T-cell line C8166 at either a single dose of 106 cells or additionally fivefold diluted from 4 × 105 to 130 cells in duplicates. Medium and C8166 cells were replenished every 3 to 4 days, and the total culture volume was maintained at approximately 15 ml. All cultures were observed for 28 days or until a cytopathic effect was apparent. The assay limit was 1.6 infected cells per 106 PBLs. Culture results were confirmed by indirect immunofluorescent staining. Fifty percent end points were calculated by using the Kärber formula, and the results were expressed as the number of infected cells per 106 PBLs. The lack of SIV infection was confirmed by a negative nested PCR for proviral DNA.
CD4+ and CD8+ lymphocyte enumeration. A whole-blood lysis method was used to assay PBLs for CD4+ (OKT4; Ortho Diagnostics) and CD8+ (DK25; Dako) cells (17). Briefly, heparinized blood samples were combined with a specific or isotype-matched MAb, incubated with Immunolyse (Coulter) to lyse erythrocytes, fixed with 1% formaldehyde in PBS, and analyzed on a FACScan flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson). Absolute numbers of each lymphocyte subset were determined from the differential leukocyte counts and total leukocyte counts.
Animal care. Indian rhesus macaques were bred and immunized at the Oxford University Farm and challenged at the Centre for Applied Microbiology and Research in Porton Down in accordance with the guidelines of the Home Office Code of Practice. All procedures were carried out under general anesthesia.
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RESULTS |
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DNA prime-MVA boost regimen induced strong CTL responses capable of killing SIV-infected PBLs. Mamu-A*01-positive rhesus macaques Cyd, Di, and Doris were vaccinated by the DNA prime-MVA boost regimen (29) modified for primates. The animals were immunized twice i.d. with a total of 8 µg of pTH.HW DNA per immunization with the Dermal XR (formerly Accell) gene delivery device of PowderJect Vaccines, Inc. (weeks 0 and 8), followed by two i.d. needle injections of 5 × 108 PFU of MVA.HW (weeks 17 and 22) administered into the proximal area of the right hip. Both the DNA and MVA vaccines were safe and did not cause any obvious adverse reactions or discomfort.
Blood from each animal was drawn at multiple time points throughout the immunization schedule. PBLs were isolated on a Lymphoprep cushion, restimulated with peptide in vitro, and tested for their cytolytic activity against peptide-pulsed autologous B-LCL cells as targets. Following the two DNA gene gun immunizations, no significant lytic activity was detected in 2-week lymphocyte cultures, although a longer peptide restimulation can result in CTL activity (2). One week after the first MVA immunization, p11C, C-M-specific CTL responses were observed only in Doris; however, all animals developed CTL responses by week 19 (not shown). CTL lines were readily established from Cyd and Doris from a bleed on week 22 that effectively lysed peptide-sensitized targets at very low effector/target ratios (not shown). The second MVA vaccination resulted in high CTL activities of cultured lymphocytes in all three animals (week 23 [Fig. 1A]), which, at least for Doris, persisted over 13 weeks (week 35 [Fig. 1B, left panel]). Moreover, the same bulk CTL cultures lysed PHA-activated SIV-infected PBLs (Fig. 1B, right panel). Because SIV infects only CD4+ T cells and the infection is never 100%, the half-lysis of SIV-infected PBLs compared to that of the peptide-pulsed targets suggested an effective recognition and killing of SIV-infected cells by vaccine-induced CTLs.
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DNA prime-MVA boost regimen induced high levels of CD8+ p11C, C-M-specific PBLs. Soluble tetrameric Mamu-A*01-p11C, C-M peptide complexes were prepared as described in Materials and Methods, and their specificity was confirmed with established CTL lines and PBLs from a Mamu-A*01-negative macaque which served as respective positive and negative controls (Fig. 2). On the day of the FACScan analysis, frozen unrestimulated PBLs were analyzed for the presence of tetramer-binding CD8+ cells, and the results were presented as a percentage of CD8+ cells stained with the tetramer (i.e., CD8+ cells carrying a T-cell receptor specific for the Mamu-A*01-p11C, C-M-specific MHC-peptide complex). In these animals, DNA immunization alone did not elicit any population with above-background tetramer staining; however, the first MVA immunization stimulated frequencies ranging from 0.4 to 3% of CD8+ cells (Fig. 3A). In Di and Doris, these levels were boosted further by the second MVA vaccine up to 4.9 and 1.5%, respectively. The frequencies peaked 1 week after the MVA vaccination and decreased to one-half within approximately 1 week. A significant tetramer staining was still observed in Di and Doris 17 weeks after the last MVA immunization (week 35).
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Accelerated schedule of immunization induced high levels of CD8+ p11C, C-M-specific PBLs. The 5- to 8-week intervals between individual immunizations used in the first group of macaques were based on experiments which employed the gene gun to elicit antibody responses (20). When a faster, 3-week-interval vaccination schedule was tested, similar levels of tetramer-specific CD8+ cells were induced, although with a seemingly slower kinetics (Fig. 3B). The peak vaccine-induced lymphocyte frequencies were detected in 2 or 3 weeks rather than 1 week after the MVA immunization. One animal, Fiona, had a positive tetramer staining 2 weeks after the second DNA vaccine (Fig. 3B).
DNA vaccine primes CTL responses. To assess whether or not the DNA vaccine primes CTL immune responses and therefore is an important part of the vaccination regimen, two animals, Emer and Fidel, were immunized with the MVA vaccine alone, and the induction of the Mamu-A*01-p11C, C-M-specific T cells in their circulation was determined by tetramer staining (Fig. 3C). The most striking observation suggesting that DNA had made a difference was that in these two animals, two MVA vaccinations were required to detect significant tetramer staining. This is similar to previously published results (63). Thus, these data, the DNA-induced tetramer staining in Fiona (Fig. 3B), and CTL lysis after a 3-week peptide restimulation in vitro (2) indicate that there was priming of CTLs by a gene gun-delivered DNA vaccine.
One out of three animals remained uninfected after a pathogenic i.r. challenge. Animals Cyd, Di, and Doris were boosted with 5 × 108 PFU of MVA.HW on week 44 and challenged i.r. with 20 50% median infective doses of cell-free pathogenic SIVmac251 1 week later (week 45), i.e., at the peak of tetramer-determined responses, and their SIV status (Fig. 4A and B) and Mamu-A*01-p11C, C-M-specific T-cell responses (Fig. 5) were monitored at regular intervals.
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DISCUSSION |
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It was demonstrated previously in mice that a particular sequence of vaccinations, DNA followed by MVA, elicited high levels of CTLs (29) and conferred complete protection against Plasmodium berghei sporozoite challenge (61). Here, immunization of macaques by using a similar DNA prime-MVA boost vaccination regimen generated strong CTL responses detected in a 51Cr-release assay after a restimulation in vitro (Fig. 1A), as well as high frequencies of peptide-specific CD8+ lymphocytes (Fig. 3) in peripheral blood.
What makes the DNA prime-MVA boost regimen efficient in induction of CTLs? The exact mechanisms are not known, but several factors may be relevant. First, priming of CTL responses by using DNA as a vaccine vehicle may allow the initial responses to be focused on the recombinant immunogen, simply because that is the only foreign protein expressed. Although recombinant poxviruses may be intrinsically more immunogenic than DNA vectors as vaccine vehicles, virus-infected cells must produce a large number of peptide epitopes derived from virus proteins and presented by MHC class I. These may compete with the recombinant immunogen for CTL immunodominance. In most previous studies, only a minority of vaccinees immunized with recombinant vaccinia virus responded to the inserted protein, although all responded to the vaccinia virus antigens (23, 27). In this regimen, DNA-primed animals have already increased frequencies of immunogen-specific CTL precursors or memory when vaccinated with MVA. Second, both the DNA and MVA vaccines were delivered into the dermis, a major immunological inductive site, in which the multiepitope immunogen is produced by keratinocytes and shed into the immediate vicinity of Langerhans cells (LCs) and/or the multiepitope gene is delivered directly into the LCs (50). Upon activation, LCs migrate to the draining lymph nodes, where they serve as the most efficient initiators and modulators of immune reactions (4). In mice, the i.d. route of immunization was more efficient than the intramuscular needle injection (61). Third, the use of MVA rather than other vaccinia virus strains or poxviruses may be relevant (61), possibly because MVA has lost several genes coding for immunomodulatory proteins, such as the soluble receptors for gamma interferon, alpha/beta interferon, tumor necrosis factor, and CC-chemokines (8). MVA also generates a strong type I interferon response, which is likely to contribute to the CTL induction (67). Fourth, both DNA and MVA mimic natural infection by expressing antigens endogenously and thus delivering them to the MHC class I processing and presentation pathway. Fifth, the expressed HW multi-CTL epitope is nontoxic to the transfected cells, which may be due to the sequestration of the polypeptide into large cytoplasmic vesicles (32). This may allow the cells to sustain the production of the immunogen over a longer time or until their destruction by the immune responses. Finally, there is now an emerging body of data suggesting that combined vaccination protocols involving different vaccine vehicles, routes, or means of antigen presentation to the immune system induce immune responses more efficiently and in some instances protected macaques against virus challenge. Thus, DNA priming followed by Env protein boosting increased antibody, but not CTL, responses and protected macaques against a nonpathogenic simian-human immunodeficiency virus strain (SHIVHXBc2) challenge (41). Sequential bimodal immunizations of monkeys with DNA and the recombinant Western Reserve (WR) strain of vaccinia virus significantly decreased virus loads after infection (21). DNA prime-recombinant fowlpox boost vaccinations held nonpathogenic HIV (36) and nonpathogenic SHIVIIIB (54) below the level of detection. In the latter study, two animals remained uninfected after a challenge with pathogenic SHIV89.6P, a protection mediated by a neutralizing antibody-independent mechanism; however, there is a possibility that protective responses could have been boosted or induced by the two previous SHIVIIIB exposures.
Mamu-A*01-p11C, C-M-specific CD8+ PBLs are functionally heterogeneous and consist mainly of two subpopulations. The first subpopulation are memory or precursor CTLs which may be fewer in number, but are able to proliferate and need to be reactivated and expanded to observe killing in vitro. Their frequencies can be determined in LDAs. The second subpopulation are the expanded CTLs, which if sufficiently high can be demonstrated by fresh killing (2). However, antigen-specific CD8+ T cells can also be "silenced" or rendered nonfunctional, but are still abundant enough to be detected by a tetramer (77). On a few occasions the present study demonstrated discordance between CTL lysis in vitro and tetramer staining. First, Cyd, Di, and Doris gave respective peptide-specific lyses of 48, 50, and 66% of total 51Cr release at week 23 (Fig. 1), while their tetramer-detected CD8+ T-lymphocyte levels were 0.7, 4.9, and 1.5% of total CD8+ PBLs, respectively (Fig. 3). Similarly, 49, 38, and 34% specific lysis at week 49 (Fig. 6) corresponded to respective 0.52, 4.90, and 2.46% tetramer-stained CD8+ PBLs (Fig. 5). A closer comparison of the immune responses in Doris at weeks 23 and 35 (Fig. 1) revealed that while the peptide-specific lysis of the same effector/target ratios decreased 1.5-fold (28:1) and 3-fold (14:1), the tetramer staining decreased 7-fold (Fig. 3A). Also, while in all animals the tetramer staining decreased at least by half between weeks 18 and 19 (Fig. 3), the peptide-specific lysis after in vitro restimulation increased (not shown). In the absence of persisting high levels of antigen due to the lack of MVA replication, the half-life of the tetramer staining was approximately 1 to 2 weeks (Fig. 3A and 5 [Cyd]). Finally, no correlation between tetramer staining and virus load could be inferred, although the numbers of animals in this study were small.
Can CTLs protect against infection with immunodeficiency viruses? Cytolytic activity cannot prevent incoming cell-free virus from infecting host cells. However, in the laboratory, CTLs killed HIV-infected cells before they produced new virions (74) and released chemokines which inhibited HIV infection (51, 68). Thus, in vivo, CTLs may be able to clear the initial small number of infected cells before HIV spreads further and establishes generalized infection (46, 73). This might explain detection of HIV-specific CTL responses in exposed, but uninfected commercial sex workers whose cells were fully susceptible to infection with HIV (56, 57), in uninfected infants born to HIV-infected mothers (59), and seronegative health care workers occupationally exposed to HIV-contaminated body fluids (49). The same SIV gag-derived p11C, C-M epitope as used in this study was shown to be immunodominant (40) and to contribute to the suppression of both the acute and chronic viremias (60) in SIV-infected monkeys. There have been two studies in which animals with vaccine-induced CTLs against the same single Gag epitope were challenged and not protected against infection (75), although a decrease in virus load was observed (45). However, there was a possibility that the levels of CTLs in the former challenge study were lower than those in the animals here due to boosting with a suboptimal 12-mer peptide, p11C (64), and protection is likely to depend on the strength of CTLs (23). Alternatively, CTLs specific for some SIV epitopes other than p11C, C-M may be more protective by analogy to the infection with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus, in which CTLs specific for different epitopes differed in their protective capacities (24, 25). Thus, CTLs against proteins expressed early in the replication cycle (e.g., Nef, Tat, or Rev), may have a better chance to prevent infection than those against late structural proteins (e.g., Gag), although this difference is likely to be subtle.
More importantly, broader CTL responses against multiple epitopes may be critical for the success of a prophylactic HIV vaccine. Three rhesus epitopes restricted by Mamu-A*01, -A*02, and -B*01 molecules had been published (43, 70, 76) at the time of the construction of the DNA and were included in the HW multi-CTL epitope vaccines employed in this study. However, only the Mamu-A*01-restricted epitope turned out, after a correction (1), to be immunogenic in this study. Some uncertainty surrounds the Mamu-B*01-restricted epitope, because it does not fit the amino acid sequence motif currently defined for this MHC type (71). None of the three selected Mamu-A*01+ animals was Mamu-A*02+. Recently, six new epitopes and their restricting Mamu molecules have been defined, and sequence-specific primers have been designed to screen for the Mamu-A*01 (38) and several other alleles (71). These new developments increase the utility of the rhesus macaque model for testing epitope-based vaccines.
CTLs require "help" provided by CD4+ T cells for maintenance of their effector functions, and even dendritic cells may be conditioned by CD4+ cells to provide sufficient costimulatory signals to CTLs (5, 52, 62). For CTL epitope-based vaccines, such as the HW polyepitope used in this study, a long string of MHC class I-restricted epitopes will create novel helper epitopes presented by MHC class II molecules and activate CD4+ T-cell responses after vaccination. However, these CD4+ helper T cells will not be activated by incoming virus. Should a prophylactic vaccine induce HIV-specific help? Delay in CD4+ T-cell activation may slow the initial spread of HIV, because HIV replicates in activated CD4+ cells. It has been shown in HIV-infected persons that vaccination with a common recall antigen, tetanus toxoid, increased plasma virus load (48, 65). Vigorous Gag-specific CD4+ T-cell responses have been associated with the control of viremia in chronic HIV infection and may enhance CTL responses (55). Some (14, 15, 35), but not all (55), studies have found CD4+ T-cell responses in exposed seronegative individuals, which might contribute to their lack of infection (22). Comparison of protective effects by vaccination with poly-CTL epitopes and whole proteins, which contain virus-derived MHC class II epitopes, could determine how important the CD4+ T-cell responses are in prophylactic immunity (34).
In this challenge, one out of three DNA-MVA-vaccinated animals challenged 1 week after the last MVA immunization remained uninfected, while all four naive animals succumbed to infection (Fig. 4). As a part of a parallel, but separate experiment, four control macaques were immunized three times with 108 PFU of wild-type (no SIV-derived gene) MVA at 12-week intervals and challenged 2 months after the last MVA immunization. One of these animals remained uninfected (data not shown [16]). In another study, wild-type MVA immunization suppressed virus loads in animals challenged with SIV 1 month after the last MVA vaccine (7). Taken together, these results suggest that MVA may induce a nonspecific antiviral effect, the mechanism of which is currently under investigation. Although for use in humans, determination of the underlying mechanisms would be comforting, the antiviral effects of MVA are generally welcome.
In conclusion, only one out of three immunized monkeys remained uninfected after a challenge which was at the pathogenic and hard-to-protect end of the monkey model spectrum. Based on the information available, this protection could not be clearly correlated with the p11C, C-M-specific T lymphocytes in the blood at the time of the i.r. challenge. It should also be noted that the challenge dose, even though it may not have infected all animals, is likely to be much higher than the doses in natural HIV transmission. In any case, we and others believe that the high levels of vaccine-induced CTL responses in macaques merit an evaluation of the immunogenicity and, if that is satisfactory, efficacy of similar vaccines in clinical trials.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Eric Prieur for the preparation of CEF cells; Susan Steffen for tissue typing of rhesus macaques; Rod Dunbar and Graham Ogg for advice during the production of tetramers; Sharon Leech for assistance with virus load determination; and Sarah Wolfensohn, Maggie Lloyd, James Davys, and Mike Dennis for excellent veterinary services.
Grant support from MRC U.K. and the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (T.H., R.V.S., and A.J.M.); MRC U.K. (T.J.B. and G.L.S.), grants RR00167, AI32426, and AI41913 (J.E.B., T.M.A., and D.I.W.); and the U.K. Department of Health (S.A.S., N.C., and M.P.C.) is fully acknowledged.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Oxford, The John Radcliffe, Oxford OX3 9DS, United Kingdom. Phone: (1865) 222334. Fax: (1865) 222502. E-mail: thanke{at}molbiol.ox.ac.uk.
Present address: MRC Laboratories, Fajara, Banjul, The Gambia, West Africa.
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