Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Virology, June 2005, p. 7933-7937, Vol. 79, No. 12
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.12.7933-7937.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts 01605,1 Laboratory of Immunoregulation, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bethesda, Maryland 20892,2 Department of Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 277103
Received 3 November 2004/ Accepted 15 February 2005
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
A variety of candidate HIV-1 vaccines have included Env for the purpose of generating a neutralizing antibody response (8, 14, 20). Among these, DNA vaccines have proven to be poor inducers of neutralizing antibodies on their own but nonetheless prime for a detectable neutralizing antibody response after Env protein boosting (1, 9, 11, 13, 21, 22). Unfortunately, the neutralizing antibodies generated in these studies have primarily targeted T-cell-line-adapted strains and a small fraction of primary isolates of HIV-1 that are unusually sensitive to neutralization. Most primary isolates of HIV-1 are substantially less sensitive to neutralization and more difficult to target with vaccines (2-4, 15).
It has not been clear whether the DNA prime and protein boost strategy affords an advantage over Env protein immunization alone with respect to the elicitation of a neutralizing antibody response that targets typical primary HIV-1 isolates that are not easily neutralized. In this regard, the JR-FL strain of HIV-1 exhibits such a neutralization phenotype (6) and therefore represents a relevant viral target upon which different vaccine strategies can be evaluated and compared. In the present study, we investigated the ability of the JR-FL gp120 protein to generate a neutralizing antibody response with and without prior priming with recombinant DNA vaccines expressing soluble secreted forms of either JR-FL gp120 or JR-FL gp140.
Two versions of JR-FL Env DNA vaccines were constructed by subcloning codon-optimized JR-FL Env gene sequences (7) into the pJW4303 DNA vaccine vector (12). The gp120 DNA vaccine codes for the ectodomain of the JR-FL Env protein. The gp140 DNA vaccine encodes gp120 plus the extracellular region of gp41, with the cleavage site between gp120 and gp41 left intact. Results of a previous study suggested that both the gp120 and gp140 forms of Env DNA vaccines were able to overcome the low immunogenicity of a full-length Env DNA vaccine, insofar as high-level anti-Env antibody responses were elicited by the gp120 and gp140 DNA vaccines compared to a gp160 DNA vaccine (13). The expression of JR-FL gp120 and gp140 by the DNA vaccines was confirmed by Western blotting using supernatants from 293T cells transiently transfected with either of the two DNA plasmids.
In the present study, Env DNA priming followed by gp120 protein boosting was compared to gp120 protein immunization alone. New Zealand White rabbits received either a gp120 DNA vaccine (RJ001 and RJ002) or a gp140 DNA vaccine (RJ003 and RJ004) by gene gun inoculation at weeks 0, 4, 8, and 12. The DNA dose at each immunization was 36 µg. The recombinant JR-FL gp120 protein consisted of 100 µg of gp120 mixed with incomplete Freund's adjuvant; the gp120 protein was administered by intramuscular injection at weeks 16 and 20. One control group (rabbits RJ005 and RJ006) was inoculated with empty DNA vector at weeks 0, 4, 8, and 12 followed by two gp120 protein boosts at weeks 16 and 20. A second control group (RJ007 to RJ009) was inoculated with gp120 protein at weeks 2, 4, 8, and 30 (Fig. 1).
![]() View larger version (27K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. HIV-1 JR-FL Env-specific IgG responses in New Zealand White rabbits as measured by ELISA. (A) Temporal serum anti-gp120 IgG responses were monitored for rabbits immunized with either the JR-FL gp120 DNA vaccines (RJ001 and RJ002), the JR-FL gp140 DNA vaccines (RJ003 and RJ004), or the control vector DNA plasmid (RJ005 and RJ006) followed by gp120 protein boosts. Rabbits in the second control group (RJ007 to RJ009) received four JR-FL gp120 protein immunizations without a DNA prime. Black arrows indicate the times of DNA immunizations, and open arrows indicate the times of protein immunizations. Equal amounts of the JR-FL gp120 antigens (0.1 µg/well) were added to plates precoated with concanavalin A (5 µg/well). Detection of gp120-specific IgG was done as previously reported (13) using biotinylated anti-rabbit IgG and horseradish peroxidase-conjugated streptavidin (Vector Lab). (B) The end titration titers of the above rabbit sera were determined when the optical density readings at the highest serum dilution were twofold above the optical density reading of the negative control wells with the normal rabbit sera. Geometric means of the anti-gp120 IgG titers are shown with standard deviations for sera collected before the start of immunization (Pre-immune), 2 weeks after the fourth DNA immunization (DNA prime), or 2 weeks after one or more protein boosts (as indicated).
|
The serum samples were next assessed for neutralizing activity against the vaccine strain, JR-FL, and a highly neutralization-sensitive R5 strain, SF162 (Fig. 2). Neutralization was measured as either reductions in p24 Gag antigen synthesis in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (18) or reductions in Tat-responsive luciferase reporter gene expression in 5.25.EGFP.Luc.M7 cells (17). Antibodies capable of neutralizing JR-FL were detected only in animals that were primed with Env DNA and boosted with protein. In these animals, sporadic neutralization of JR-FL was detected after DNA priming. Neutralizing activity was much more consistent after protein boosting, as detected in both assays. Titers of neutralizing antibodies against JR-FL were between 1:12 and 1:48 (Fig. 2B). There were no clear differences in the magnitude of this response in animals primed with gp120 DNA and those primed with gp140 DNA.
![]() View larger version (35K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Neutralizing activities of rabbit sera. Neutralization was measured as either reductions in p24 Gag antigen synthesis in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (A) (18) or reductions in Tat-responsive luciferase reporter gene expression in 5.25.EGFP.Luc.M7 cells (B) (17). The actual percent reductions of p24 Gag antigen at rabbit serum dilutions of 1:4 or 1:12 were used for panel A. Any reduction of p24 less than 50% is indicated by <. Neutralization titers are the dilution at which relative luminescence units (RLU) were reduced by 50% compared to virus control wells after subtraction of background RLU (B). Sera collected before the start of immunization (Pre-immune), 2 weeks after the last DNA immunization (DNA prime), or 2 weeks after one or more protein immunizations (as indicated) were used in both types of neutralization studies. The starting serum dilution was 1:20 for assay against SF162 and 1:10 for assay against JR-FL. NAb, neutralizing antibody.
|
We further studied the breadth of the anti-Env antibody responses after gp120 protein boosting in Env DNA-primed rabbits by using highly sensitive surface plasmon resonance analysis. Biacore chips were coated individually with a panel of five recombinant gp120 antigens produced from CHO cells. The rabbit sera showed high specificity against the autologous JR-FL gp120 antigen, moderate reactivity against gp120 from primary HIV-1 isolates 92MW959 (subgroup C), 92UG21-9 (subgroup A), and 92TH14-12 (subgroup B), and poor reactivity against gp120 from ADA (subgroup B) (Fig. 3A). These data indicated that serum samples from rabbits immunized with JR-FL gp120 (delivered by DNA prime and protein boost) had a preferred reactivity against the autologous JR-FL gp120 antigen.
![]() View larger version (18K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. Breadth of rabbit anti-gp120 IgG responses in rabbit sera showed positive neutralizing antibody responses against JR-FL. (A) Cross-reactivity of antibodies specific for HIV-1 gp120s in rabbit sera 2 weeks after the second protein boost was assessed using a Biacore 3000 biosensor. Each serum sample was diluted 1/100 in HBT-CMD running buffer (HEPES buffer, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 0.1% Tween 20, 0.5% soluble carboxymethyl dextran) and passed at a flow rate of 5 µl/min for 20 min over surfaces to which the indicated gp120s had been covalently coupled to a density of approximately 750 relative units (RU). A reference flow cell was coated with alcohol dehydrogenase to approximately the same density to control for nonspecific surface effects. The response obtained from each sensorgram 5 s prior to the end of the association phase was determined. The response from preimmune serum of each rabbit was subtracted to control for nonspecific binding of serum proteins to the sensor surface. (B) The same rabbit serum samples at 2 weeks after the second protein boost were analyzed for neutralizing activities against four primary HIV-1 isolates (1196, 0692, 6101, and PVO) in addition to the autologous JR-FL strain. All of the viruses were grown in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and the assays were conducted in 5.25.EGFP.Luc.M7 cells (17) with rabbit serum at a 1:10 dilution. Neutralizing activities are presented as the percent reduction of RLU compared to virus control wells after subtraction of background RLU. Preimmune sera for all four rabbits did not show any positive neutralizing activities (data not shown).
|
The exact mechanism underlying the advantage of DNA prime plus protein boost is not clear at this point. Results of a previous study suggested that antibody maturation through increased avidity might be responsible for improved neutralizing activity in rabbits immunized by DNA priming and protein boosting (21). We therefore examined avidity in the presence of increasing concentrations of NaSCN. Consistent with previous results mentioned above, avidity increased more rapidly after gp120 boosting in gp120 DNA-primed rabbits than in rabbits that were primed with vector DNA (Fig. 4). However, our results cannot exclude the possibility that the difference in avidity is in part due to the duration and/or the number of immunizations used in this study.
![]() View larger version (20K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 4. Avidity of gp120-specific IgG in rabbits that received recombinant gp120 protein antigens with (RJ001 and RJ002) and without (RJ005 and RJ006) gp120 DNA priming. Avidity was measured by NaSCN displacement ELISA (21). Rabbit sera were first added to the ELISA plate coated with JR-FL gp120 and incubated for 60 min at 23°C. After washing, increasing concentrations of sodium thiocyanate (NaSCN) were added to the plates for 20 min. After another round of washing, bound antibodies were detected by using the regular ELISA procedure as previously described (21). Rabbit sera collected 2 weeks after the last DNA immunization (DNA prime) or 2 weeks after one or two protein boosts (as indicated) were used.
|
This project was supported in part by NIH/NIAID grants AI40337 and AI46294 (S.L.) and AI30034 (D.M.).
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»