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Journal of Virology, March 2005, p. 3855-3858, Vol. 79, No. 6
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.6.3855-3858.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Improving the Safety of a Conditional-Live Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Vaccine by Controlling both Gene Expression and Cell Entry
Atze T. Das,1
Chris E. Baldwin,1,2
Monique Vink,1 and
Ben Berkhout1*
Department of Human Retrovirology,1
International Antiviral Therapy Evaluation Center, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands2
Received 28 September 2004/
Accepted 25 October 2004

ABSTRACT
Live attenuated human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)
vaccines are considered unsafe because faster-replicating pathogenic
virus variants may evolve after vaccination. We previously presented
a conditional-live HIV-1 variant of which replication can be
switched off as an alternative vaccination strategy. To improve
the safety of such a vaccine, we constructed a new HIV-1 variant
that depends not only on doxycycline for gene expression but
also on the T20 peptide for cell entry. Replication of this
virus can be limited to the level required to induce the immune
system by transient administration of doxycycline and T20. Subsequent
withdrawal of these inducers efficiently blocks viral replication
and evolution.

TEXT
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vaccines based on
a live attenuated virus have shown some promise in the simian
immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-macaque model but are generally
considered unsafe for use in humans (
1,
9,
13,
14,
23). The
major problem is the persistence of the attenuated virus, and
ongoing replication may eventually lead to the selection of
fitter and more pathogenic virus variants (
2,
3,
8). Ideally,
one would like to restrict virus replication to the time that
is needed to provide full protection. Several approaches have
been reported that address this issue. For instance, virus replication
can be stopped after vaccination by administration of antiviral
drugs (
19). Whereas this may be a good strategy for in vitro
studies, application in humans seems problematic because long-term
virus inhibition will require continuous drug administration
and the virus may develop drug resistance. An alternative approach
is the construction of a "single-cycle" virus that can execute
only a single round of replication. However, it is questionable
whether such limited replication will be sufficient for the
induction of protective immunity.
We and others previously presented a unique genetic approach that uses a conditional-live HIV-1 virus (7, 10, 11, 24, 25). In this HIV-rtTA virus, the Tat-TAR regulatory mechanism that controls viral gene expression and replication was inactivated by mutation of both the Tat gene and the TAR RNA structure and functionally replaced by the Tet system for inducible gene expression (6). The rtTA gene encoding a man-made transcriptional activator was inserted in place of the nef gene, and the tet operator (tetO) DNA binding sites were inserted into the long terminal repeat promoter. Since the rtTA protein can only bind tetO and activate transcription in the presence of doxycycline (DOX), the HIV-rtTA variant replicates exclusively when DOX is administered. Upon vaccination with this virus, replication can be temporarily activated and controlled to the extent needed for induction of the immune system by transient DOX administration. The initial HIV-rtTA virus has been improved significantly by virus evolution (12, 21, 22), and we have shown efficient and DOX-dependent replication not only in vitro in T-cell lines but also ex vivo in human lymphoid tissue (18). However, additional safety features may be required before such a vaccine virus can be considered for use in humans.
We recently came across another way to control HIV-1 replication by a nontoxic drug. An HIV-1 patient within the Academic Medical Center (University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands) entered a clinical trial with the entry inhibitor T20 (also called enfuvirtide and fuzeon) in 2001. T20 is a 36-mer peptide that mimics part of the HR2 domain of the envelope gp41 protein (Env-gp41), which is intrinsically involved in the fusion of the viral and cellular membranes (4). Although viral replication was successfully inhibited initially, a gradual increase in the viral load suggested the emergence of T20-resistant HIV-1 variants, and we set out to perform a detailed genotypic and phenotypic analysis (5). An initial amino acid change (Val-554-Ala [Env coordinates]) within the HR1 portion of Env-gp41 was found to provide resistance to T20 (26). Most intriguingly, an additional change (Asn-642-Lys) within HR2 was observed that improved the level of resistance yet abolished the ability of the virus to replicate in the absence of T20. In other words, this double mutant is dependent on the T20 peptide for replication, and a mechanistic model was presented to explain T20-induced viral entry (5).
We decided to construct an HIV-1 virus that replicates only in the presence of both T20 and DOX by introducing the observed gp41 changes into HIV-rtTA. These mutations had been introduced earlier into a molecular clone of the CXCR4-tropic HIV-1 LAI isolate (5). The DraI-BamHI Env fragment of this clone was used to replace the corresponding sequences in the optimized HIV-rtTA construct that contains the 2
tetO configuration (21) and the rtTA-F86Y variant with greatly improved DOX sensitivity (12) (Fig. 1A). This HIV-rtTA-T20 plasmid was transfected into the SupT1 T-cell line, and viral replication was assayed in the presence or absence of DOX and T20. We used the parental HIV-rtTA virus as a control. This virus requires only DOX for replication and is effectively inhibited by the antiviral peptide T20 (Fig. 1B). HIV-rtTA-T20 replicates exclusively in the presence of both DOX and T20 (Fig. 1C). Addition of a single inducer, either DOX or T20, is not sufficient to support replication of this new HIV-1 variant.
Because DOX and T20 control different steps of the HIV-1 replication
cycle, additional manipulation seems possible. For instance,
the sole addition of DOX to cells carrying the integrated HIV-rtTA-T20
provirus will result in another round of virus production, yet
the infection of new cells and virus spread will be blocked
in the absence of T20. In fact, this plus-DOX-no-T20 regimen
seems to be an ideal strategy for booster vaccination without
further virus spread (Fig.
2A). Repeated DOX administration
will not only boost the immune system but may also lead to the
removal of antigen-expressing cells by the immune system. This
elimination of provirus-containing cells will further improve
the safety of the vaccine. To test this scenario, we started
four cultures of HIV-rtTA-T20 in SupT1 cells in the presence
of both DOX and T20 (Fig.
2B). Viral replication resulted in
the detection of CA-p24 and the appearance of syncytia in the
culture. At day 3 we washed out both inducers, which resulted
in silencing of viral replication, and the CA-p24 level dropped
below the level of detection around day 11. At day 35, each
culture was split in four samples that were treated differently.
Addition of both DOX and T20 induced a spreading infection with
high CA-p24 levels and large syncytia. Addition of only DOX
did activate a modest level of virus production, but did not
result in a spreading infection. The untreated control and the
sample that received only T20 did not produce any virus.
We have described the construction of an HIV-1 variant that
is dependent for its replication on the antibiotic DOX and the
antiviral peptide T20. This double dependency clearly improves
the safety of this virus as a conditional-live virus vaccine.
Since the T20-dependent phenotype is the product of natural
virus evolution, one could wonder whether the same evolution
process may hamper the proposed vaccine approach. For instance,
HIV-rtTA-T20 could evolve to a T20-resistant or wild-type-like
T20-sensitive phenotype. T20 resistance would require a Lys-642-Asn
reversion in HR2, and we could try to limit this escape route
by introducing an alternative Lys codon (or perhaps even an
alternative amino acid) that needs multiple nucleotide substitutions
to convert into an Asn codon. Evolution to the wild-type phenotype
is more difficult, because it requires an additional Ala-554-Val
reversion in HR1. The alternative with an initial change in
HR1 seems impossible, because a virus that carries only the
HR2 mutation does not replicate (
5). These evolutionary possibilities
will be addressed in future studies. However, we emphasize that
the DOX control of viral gene expression provides an efficient
and independent means to prevent HIV-rtTA-T20 evolution, as
the virus cannot evolve if it does not replicate. Nevertheless,
we realize that the efficacy and safety of this vaccine approach
requires further testing in the SIV-macaque model, and we recently
managed to construct a DOX-dependent version of SIVmac239 for
this purpose (unpublished results). It will be of interest to
test if the T20-dependent phenotype can also be transferred
onto the Env protein of SIVmac239. This may not be straightforward,
because T20 is not an effective inhibitor of SIV. However, more
potent inhibitor peptides with a broader-activity spectrum have
been developed, e.g., T1249, although its clinical development
was recently suspended (
15-
17,
20). Future virus evolution and
selection experiments with such compounds may provide means
to control SIV entry into the cell by a nontoxic drug. Finally,
the phenotype of T20-dependent virus entry and DOX-dependent
gene expression provides a nice research tool to dissect multiple
steps in viral replication, and it may provide a means to synchronize
HIV-1 viruses or HIV-based lentiviral vectors at the level of
gene expression or infection.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Xue Zhou for help in some of the experiments and Stephan
Heynen for the CA-p24 ELISA.
The HIV-rtTA vaccine research is sponsored by the Technology Foundation STW (Applied Science Division of NWO and the Technology Program of the Ministry of Economic Affairs, Utrecht, The Netherlands).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Human Retrovirology, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Meibergdreef 15, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Phone: (31-20) 5664822. Fax: (31-20) 6916531. E-mail:
b.berkhout{at}amc.uva.nl.


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Journal of Virology, March 2005, p. 3855-3858, Vol. 79, No. 6
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.6.3855-3858.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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