Neutralizing antibodies were next assessed with SIVsmE660. This virus
is an uncloned quasispecies of the same parental strain from which
SIVsmH-4 was derived (18) and, therefore, is closely related
to SIVsmH-4 genetically. As shown in Fig.
2, all animals were negative for
SIVsmE660-neutralizing antibodies on the day of challenge. Also, no
neutralization of this virus was detected 2 weeks postchallenge, and
little neutralization was detected 8 weeks postchallenge despite the
fact that most animals had very high SIVsmH-4 neutralization titers at
one or both of these time points. It is important to note that
preferential neutralization of SIVsmH-4 by week-8 plasma samples was
seen for all groups of animals, including those that received
recombinant MVAs lacking Env (i.e., MVA-gag-pol and
nonrecombinant MVA). This outcome indicates that the inability to
neutralize SIVsmE660 was not related to vaccine-induced immune
interference associated with SIVsmH-4 Env priming (38). The
outcome is more likely explained by epitopes shared by both viruses
that, although they are highly immunogenic in infected macaques, are
not adequately exposed for antibody binding on the native SIVsmE660 Env
complex relative to their exposure on the native SIVsmH-4 Env complex.
On the basis of immunophenotype and implied differences in native
envelope glycoprotein structure, SIVsmH-4 resembles a
T-cell-line-adapted (TCLA) strain, whereas SIVsmE660 resembles primary
isolates of HIV-1 (3, 35, 49).
Neutralization of SIVsmE660 was first detected 12 weeks postchallenge
with plasmas from a subset of animals in each group, where the titers
either peaked at this time or continued to rise for at least 20 to 28 weeks. Peak titers of SIVsmE660-neutralizing antibodies never reached
the levels observed with SIVsmH-4 and, in fact, were always >10-fold
lower in magnitude, again indicating that SIVsmE660 is much less
sensitive to antibody-mediated neutralization than SIVsmH-4. It should
be noted that the rapid progressors in the MVA group that developed low
levels of neutralizing antibody to SIVsmH-4 also produced no antibodies
that neutralized SIVsmE660.
The difficulty by which SIVsmE660 was neutralized relative to SIVsmH-4
suggests that detection of an anamnestic neutralizing antibody response
targeting SIVsmE660 would be delayed relative to the response measured
with SIVsmH-4. The MVA-gag-pol-env group of animals was the
only case where an anamnestic neutralizing antibody response might have
been detected with SIVsmE660. For example, two of six animals in this
group had low titers of SIVsmE660-neutralizing antibodies 8 weeks
postchallenge. By comparison, all animals in the remaining groups were
negative (<30) at this time. In addition, five of six animals in the
MVA-gag-pol-env group had titers of SIVsmE660-neutralizing
antibodies that surpassed those in the MVA-gag-pol and
MVA-env groups of animals 12 weeks postchallenge. However,
because the magnitude of neutralization in the
MVA-gag-pol-env animals was not much different from the
nonrecombinant MVA group, any anamnestic response targeting SIVsmE660
was probably weak.
We next examined whether an anamnestic neutralizing antibody response
could be detected with other strains of SIV. For this, plasma samples
from three animals in each group were assessed for their ability to
neutralize highly neutralization-sensitive, TCLA stocks of
SIV/DeltaB670 (50) and SIVmac251 (25, 30), and a
neutralization-insensitive stock of molecularly cloned
SIVmac239/nef-open (30, 32). Because the anamnestic
responses detected with SIVsmH-4 were fairly uniform, we selected
plasma samples randomly from a subset of animals in each group for
these assessments. The results shown in Tables
1 and 2
include titers measured with SIVsmH-4 and SIVsmE660 derived from Fig. 1
and 2 for comparison. Table 1 shows that an anamnestic neutralizing
antibody response was detectable with SIV/DeltaB670 and, to a lesser
extent, with SIVmac251 2 weeks postchallenge in the MVA-env
and MVA-gag-pol-env groups of animals. Table 2 shows that
the anamnestic response was no longer evident 8 weeks postchallenge,
which was similar to the results obtained with SIVsmH-4. Table 2 also
shows that all 8-week plasma samples failed to neutralize SIVmac239. We
conclude that the neutralizing activity of the antibodies produced
during the anamnestic phase, and shortly thereafter, were highly
specific for SIVsmH-4 and heterologous TCLA strains of SIV.
The fact that passively administered neutralizing antibodies have
proven effective against AIDS viruses in macaques (4, 8, 13, 28,
33, 46) and hu-PBL-SCID mice (9) suggests that
neutralizing antibody induction would benefit an HIV-1 vaccine. How
much of a benefit the antibodies provide may depend on their ability to
neutralize diverse genetic variants of the virus, including primary
isolates (9, 33, 46). Antibodies produced during the
anamnestic phase in our vaccinated animals did not neutralize SIVsmE660, making it uncertain that the antibodies contributed to the
partial efficacy observed (39). The fact that equal levels of efficacy were achieved regardless of whether env was
present in the recombinant MVA vaccine (39) is further
evidence that neutralizing antibodies probably contributed little.
Nonetheless, it was possible that our assay stock of SIVsmE660 produced
in CEMx174 cells was less sensitive to neutralization than the animal challenge stock produced in rhesus PBMC and, therefore, underestimated neutralization potency. To address this possibility, we performed neutralization assays with the animal challenge stock of SIVsmE660 without further passage. Because this stock was limited in supply and
is valuable for animal challenges, our assessments were made on a
subset of plasma samples. We selected five samples obtained during the
anamnestic phase (2 weeks postchallenge) that contained high titers of
SIVsmH-4-neutralizing antibodies (animals B1, B5, B6, C1, and C3), and
three samples obtained 28 weeks postchallenge that neutralized our
assay stock of SIVsmE660. As can be seen in Table
3, titers of neutralizing antibodies
obtained with the 28-week-postchallenge samples were similar for both
stocks of virus in two of three cases. Also, we showed that 50%
protection from virus-induced cell killing corresponds very closely to
a 90% reduction in p27 Gag antigen synthesis in these assays (Table 3). Although the titer was approximately 4 times higher with the animal
challenge stock in one case (animal B6), we do not consider this to be
a major difference with respect to occasional assay-to-assay variation.
No neutralization of the challenge stock of SIVsmE660 was detected with
plasmas obtained during the anamnestic phase, which agreed with results
obtained with our assay stock of the virus.
We conclude that SIVsmH-4 Env did not prime for a secondary
neutralizing antibody response to SIVsmE660 in these studies. However,
there are a number of cases where antibodies lacking detectable
neutralizing activity in vitro were nonetheless capable of preventing
infection by other viruses (10, 26, 29, 36, 37, 43, 44), and
at least one example exists in the SIV-macaque model (48).
With this in mind, we do not wish to exclude the possibility that
nonneutralizing antibodies, particularly those involved in
antibody-dependent cytotoxicity (47) and immune complex
clearance (31), played a role in our studies.
The ability to prime for a more-broadly cross-reactive neutralizing
antibody response with this vaccine candidate will most likely depend
on the nature of the immunogen(s) incorporated into the vector. One
example would be to use multiple recombinant MVA vectors, each
containing the Env glycoproteins from a different strain of virus as a
single vaccination modality. An alternate strategy would be to
incorporate the Env glycoproteins from a single strain of virus after
modifying them to present conserved neutralization epitopes in a highly
immunogenic configuration. An important first step will be to determine
whether greater efficacy can be achieved in the present model by
priming for a neutralizing antibody response that is capable of
targeting the challenge virus. This can be tested by incorporating the
Env glycoproteins from a strain of virus that is closely matched to the
challenge virus in terms of antigenicity and quasispecies
complexity. We are in the process of pursuing this goal by using
the highly pathogenic, molecularly cloned SIVsmE543-3 as both the
vaccine and challenge strain. This virus exhibits a
neutralization-resistant phenotype reminiscent of primary HIV-1
isolates (16).
With the majority of HIV-1 transmissions occurring in developing
countries that have limited financial resources, the high cost of Env
glycoprotein production, especially in the case of a polyvalent
vaccine, will be a major economic challenge for global immunization
(2). Recombinant vectors offer a cost-effective and feasible
alternative. Although inoculation with recombinant poxviruses without
Env glycoprotein boosting has not induced high levels of neutralizing
antibodies, efficient B-cell priming by these vectors should facilitate
an anamnestic neutralizing antibody response to infection. An
appropriate anamnestic B-cell response might exert sufficient pressure
on the virus during early stages of infection as the CTL response
matures. One of the vectors used here (MVA-gag-pol) was
previously shown to elicit potent SIV-specific CTL in macaques
(45). Together, these immune responses might be capable of
controlling virus replication to an extent that would limit immune
suppression and virus transmission better than either response alone.
We thank Ronald C. Desrosiers for providing SIVmac251 and SIVmac239
and Michael Murphy-Corb for providing SIV/DeltaB670.
Partial support for these studies was provided by a grant from the NIH
(AI-85343).
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