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Journal of Virology, May 2006, p. 4705-4716, Vol. 80, No. 10
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.80.10.4705-4716.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Hanke,1 and
Andrew McMichael1
MRC Human Immunology Unit, Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford OX3 9DS, United Kingdom,1 Harrison Department, Oxford Genito-Urinary Medicine, Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford OX2 6HE, United Kingdom,2 Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine, Oxford University, Oxford, United Kingdom3
Received 20 August 2005/ Accepted 16 February 2006
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In the quest for an effective therapeutic strategy, it may be necessary to define immunogenicity in terms of both the magnitude and the quality of induced responses. Recent studies focusing on dissecting the immunological parameters which might distinguish HIV-1-infected long-term nonprogressors from typical progressors have revealed differences in T-cell cytokine secretion profiles, perforin expression, and proliferative capacity (5, 15, 25). Whether these are the cause or consequence of controlled virus replication is uncertain (18). Furthermore, elicitation of HIV-1-specific T cells by prophylactic vaccination failed to prevent disease progression in an individual who subsequently seroconverted, despite the apparently favorable functional and phenotypic profile of immune responses after HIV-1 infection had occurred (4). Together, these observations highlight the need for a more comprehensive analysis of vaccine-induced responses in humans in order to identify the candidates which merit evaluation in randomized controlled trials and select the most appropriate immunological endpoints.
Modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) has potential as a vaccine vector: it is safe for use in humans and efficiently stimulates cellular responses to recombinant antigens, particularly after priming with another vaccine (23, 24, 37). MVA.HIVA is a vaccine expressing an immunogen, HIVA, which comprises consensus HIV-1 Gag p24/p17 sequences fused to a multi-cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) epitope gene (14). It has been evaluated in phase I trials in over 200 HIV-seronegative volunteers in the United Kingdom and east Africa and has an excellent safety profile (I. Cebere, submitted for publication). Recently, we have shown that MVA.HIVA can boost T-cell responses primed by a DNA vaccine encoding the same immunogen (12a, 27). However, data on the safety and immunogenicity of recombinant MVA vaccines in HIV-1-infected individuals are sparse (8, 16). In this study we investigated the effects of intradermal administration of MVA.HIVA to HIV-1-seropositive subjects under fully suppressive HAART. We describe the frequency, breadth, and kinetics of CD8+ and CD4+ T-cell responses amplified by MVA.HIVA immunization in HIV-1-infected individuals. Vaccine-stimulated T cells displayed some of the functional and phenotypic characteristics described in long-term nonprogressors and could thus potentially alter the natural history of infection.
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Vaccine and vaccination schedule. The HIVA gene comprises the consensus HIV-1 clade A Gag p24/p17 sequence fused to a multi-CTL epitope gene and has been described previously (27). MVA.HIVA was produced according to Good Manufacturing Practice by IDT, Germany. Subjects were immunized by intradermal needle injection with two doses of 5 x 107 PFU MVA.HIVA in 0.1 ml normal saline separated by a 4-week interval.
Peptides.
Synthetic high-performance liquid chromatography-purified (>80% on mass spectroscopy) peptides (Sigma-Genosys) based on the sequence of the HIVA immunogen comprised (i) 90 Gag p24/p17 15-mer peptides overlapping by 11 amino acids and (ii) 23 Gag/Pol/Nef/Env epitope peptides (optimal 9- to 11-mers). The overlapping Gag peptides were used in pools of 9 to 10 peptides in a matrix array in gamma interferon (IFN-
) enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) assays. In carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester (CFSE) assays, four sequential pools of 22 to 23 peptides (HIVA pools 1 to 4') or one pool of 90 peptides (pool 90) was used, as blood sample volumes at each bleed were limited to 50 ml. Pools 1, 2, 3, and 4 represented Gag p241-100, p2490-188, p24178-231 plus p171-48, and p1738-132, respectively. The epitope peptides were tested either as a pool (9') or individually. Pool 8' comprised known CD8+ T-cell epitopes derived from cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and influenza virus proteins and was used as an additional positive control to phytohemagglutinin (PHA).
IFN-
ELISPOT assay.
The IFN-
ELISPOT assay was performed as described previously (27). Briefly, freshly isolated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC; 1 x 105/well) were incubated in duplicate with (i) overlapping Gag peptide matrix pools, (ii) pool 9 peptides, (iii) pool 8 (positive control) peptides, (iv) medium alone (in quadruplicate), or (v) PHA (5 µg/ml; Murex, United Kingdom). The final concentration of each peptide was 4 µg/ml. CD8+-cell depletions were achieved with MACS beads (Miltenyi-Biotec, United Kingdom) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Spot-forming units (SFU) were quantified with an automated ELISPOT plate reader (AID Systems, Germany) by an observer blinded to the subjects' immunization status. The frequencies of HIV-1-specific IFN-
-releasing cells were expressed as IFN-
SFU/106 PBMC, after subtraction of the number of SFU in negative control wells. Criteria for accepting assays were <50 SFU/106 PBMC in unstimulated wells and saturation with color development reagent in PHA-stimulated wells. The breadth of the Gag-specific response was defined as the number of matrix pools yielding a response (>100 SFU/106 PBMC for this analysis) divided by 2, since each peptide was included twice in the matrix. Therefore, a response to all pools was scored as 9.5.
Tetramer and phenotype analysis. HLA-A*0201, -A3, -B7, -B8, -B*2705, and -B35 peptide tetrameric complexes were synthesized as described previously (10). Tetramer-reactive cells were detected by incubating aliquots of fresh or thawed cryopreserved PBMC (1 x 106) with fluorochrome (phycoerythrin [Sigma])-labeled tetramers at 37°C for 15 min, followed by a further 20-min incubation at room temperature with antibodies to CD8, CD38, CD45RA, and CCR7. Intracellular perforin staining was performed after permeabilization. Samples were washed, fixed, and analyzed by flow cytometry. Typically, 200,000 events were acquired in the lymphocyte gate.
Ex vivo proliferation assay. Freshly isolated PBMC were labeled with a predetermined concentration of CFSE (0.8 µM). The reaction was quenched with RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% AB human serum, L-glutamine, and penicillin-streptomycin (H10 medium), and cells were washed twice before resuspending in H10 at a density of 2 x 106/ml. Cells were cultured in 96-well round-bottomed plates (2 x 105/well in duplicate) with medium alone, HIVA peptide pools 1 to 4, or pool 90 (final concentration, 2 µg/ml) or staphylococcal enterotoxin B (1 µg/ml) for 6 days at 37°C. Cells were then harvested, washed, stained with CD8-phycoerythrin, CD4-peridinin chlorophyll a, or CD3-allophycocyanin and fixed. Approximately 5 x 104 events in the CD3+ CD4+ or CD3+ CD8+ lymphocyte gates were acquired on a FACSCalibur four-color flow cytometer using CellQuest software and subsequently analyzed using ModFit LT software. Antigen-specific proliferation was expressed either as the percentage of CFSElo cells in peptide-stimulated samples minus the percentage of CFSElo cells in unstimulated samples (single time point analyses) or as the cell division index (the percent peptide-stimulated CFSElo cells divided by the percent unstimulated CFSElo cells; longitudinal analyses). A positive response to peptides was defined as one which was at least three times the response in the unstimulated sample.
Statistical analysis. Results were expressed as the median plus range or interquartile range. Paired samples (pre- and postimmunization) were analyzed by applying the Wilcoxon signed-rank test using GraphPad Prism software.
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TABLE 1. Clinical characteristics of volunteers
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responses.
Prevaccination responses (at screening and day zero visits) to HIVA Gag p24/p17 15-mer peptides overlapping by 11 amino acids (HIVA OLP) were detected by IFN-
ELISPOT in all 18 volunteers. The total Gag-specific response was defined as the sum of all Gag peptide-specific responses divided by 2, since each peptide was duplicated in the matrix array. The median frequency at baseline was 1,301 SFU/106 PBMC (range, 82 to 4,050) (Fig. 1A). CD8+-cell depletions abrogated >50% of the response in 15/18 volunteers, indicating that these baseline Gag-specific responses were mediated predominantly by CD8+ cells (Fig. 1A). Responses to Nef, Pol, and Env optimal epitope peptides, which comprised 17/23 CD8+ T-cell epitopes in the epitope string, were observed in only three subjects. This likely reflected both the genetic background of the volunteers, as not all had HLA class I haplotypes corresponding to the known restricting elements of these epitopes (14), and the dominance of responses to Gag over non-Gag epitopes in chronic treated infections (1) (Fig. 1C and Table 1).
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FIG. 1. Responses to overlapping HIVA Gag 24/p17 15-mer and non-Gag epitope peptides obtained in ex vivo IFN- ELISPOT assays. (A) Total Gag-specific response (sum of peptide matrix pool responses divided by 2) obtained in assays with fresh undepleted (top panels) or CD8+-cell-depleted (bottom panels) PBMC from 16 vaccinees and 2 unvaccinated control subjects (014 and 019) (solid black symbols in left panels) at the time points indicated. Immunizations were given at days 0 and 28. Negative control values have been subtracted. Broken lines indicate that no sample was available for the intervening time point. (B) Box plots (interquartile range with median indicated by horizontal line) of total Gag responses of the 16 vaccinees in assays with undepleted (top) or CD8-depleted (bottom) PBMC at the time points indicated. (C) Breadth of Gag-specific responses in IFN- ELISPOT assays with undepleted PBMC before (white bars) and at the peak of the response (black bars) after one or two MVA.HIVA immunizations or, for the control subjects, the highest response seen at any time after day zero. (D) Preimmunization (white bars) and peak postimmunization (black bars) responses in IFN- ELISPOT assays with optimal CTL epitope peptides derived from Pol, Nef, and Env expressed in the epitope string (14).
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2-fold or >1,000 SFU in 12 vaccinees. Overall, responses were significantly greater at all postvaccination time points than at day zero (medians at day 0, week 2, and week 8, 1,508, 2,390, and 2,751 SFU/106 PBMC, respectively; P = 0.0005 and 0.001) (Fig. 1A). The peak response occurred after the first dose in 6 vaccinees, while in 10 subjects a further increment was seen after the second dose. When the MVA.HIVA-only group was compared with the DNA-MVA.HIVA group, peak Gag-specific responses were similar; the only difference between the two subgroups was that the peak response was attained after the first MVA.HIVA dose in four subjects who had had prior DNA vaccination compared with two who had received MVA.HIVA alone. T-cell frequencies were still significantly elevated 6 months after the first immunization (median, 1,998 SFU/106 PBMC; P = 0.004) by >2-fold in 4/15 vaccinees who have reached this time point. As CD8+-cell-depleted ELISPOT assays were performed in parallel, it was evident that Gag-specific CD4+ T cells were also augmented by MVA.HIVA immunization in 13/15 vaccinees but were unaffected in 2 vaccinees. One subject (007) was excluded from this analysis because of high background responses 7 and 14 days after the first vaccination. The median total CD8+-cell-depleted Gag-specific responses at day 0 and weeks 2, 6, and 27 were 195, 435, 346, and 404 SFU/106 PBMC, respectively (P = 0.015, 0.027, and 0.058) (Fig. 1B). CD4+ T cells contributed most of the postimmunization Gag-specific increment in five vaccinees. Subgroup analysis did not show significant differences in the magnitude of pre- and post-MVA.HIVA responses in volunteers who had received MVA.HIVA alone or prior DNA immunization.
MVA.HIVA immunization amplified not only the magnitude but also the breadth of Gag-specific CD8+ or CD4+ T-cell responses. The number of Gag OLP pools eliciting a response greater than 100 SFU/106 PBMC increased after immunization in 15/16 vaccinees, with significantly more pools being targeted at the peak of the response than at baseline (day zero and peak postvaccination; medians, five and seven pools, respectively; P < 0.0001) (Fig. 1C). Analysis of responses to the peptide matrix revealed the epitopic regions of the p24 and p17 proteins targeted by each subject. These were confirmed in subsequent assays with individual 15-mers and predefined CTL epitope peptides within these 15-mers. Boosting of responses to one or more peptides by at least threefold was observed in 12/16 vaccinees (data not shown). The maximum increment in a response to a single peptide after vaccination was 1,830 SFU. Five subjects generated CD8+ or CD4+ T-cell responses to at least 10 peptides for which no epitopes have been defined or have been defined as restricted by HLA alleles not expressed by the vaccinees (Table 2). Further analysis of these responses is under way (B. Ondondo, unpublished data). Responses to Pol, Nef, and Env epitopes in the CD8+ T-cell epitope string were amplified or induced in 6/16 vaccinees (Fig. 1D).
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TABLE 2. Peptides containing undefined CD8+ and CD4+ T-cell epitopes in Gag p24/p17 recognized by MVA.HIVA vaccine respondersa
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Tetramer staining reveals long-lived vaccine-driven CD8+ T-cell expansions, predominantly in the CCR7 CR45RA and CCR7+ CD45RA compartments.
We next used a panel of 13 fluorochrome-conjugated HLA class I (HLA-A*0201, -A3, -B7, -B8, or -B*2705) tetrameric complexes to quantify antigen-specific CD8+ T cells specific for vaccine-, HIV-1 non-vaccine-, and EBV-derived epitopes. Assays were therefore confined to vaccinees with these HLA alleles (subjects 012, 013, 015, 021, 001, 004, 006, 007, and 009). Vaccine-driven CD8+ T-cell expansions of at least twofold and with specificity for eight different epitopes were seen in 7/9 vaccinees. The peak responses detected by tetramer reactivity were seen after the second immunization. In contrast, CD8+ T cells specific for non-vaccine (EBV- or other HIV-1-derived) epitopes varied minimally from baseline values, by a median of 1.3-fold (Fig. 2A and B). The vaccine-induced expansions were maintained at near-peak levels for 12 months or were 10-fold higher than at baseline (subject 015, HLA-B*2705 p24-specific T cells) in 4/4 subjects who have reached this time point. Of note, although the functional responses to the same epitopes, indicated by the IFN-
ELISPOT assay, had declined by this time, some remained higher than preimmunization values (data not shown).
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FIG. 2. Postimmunization expansion of CD8+ T cells specific for HIV-1 epitopes in MVA.HIVA, identified by tetramer staining. (A) Representative profile showing evolution of the HLA-B*2705/p24-specific response of subject 015 at the times indicated. Ex vivo PBMC were stained with an HLA-B*2705 tetramer refolded with the KRWIILGLNK peptide. Dot plots show gated lymphocytes identified by forward and side scatter. (B) Top panel: frequencies of HIV-1-specific CD8+ T cells in seven vaccinees determined by staining with various tetramers at the times indicated. Tetramers were refolded with the following peptides: A2 p17, SLYNTVATL; A2 Pol, ILKEPVHGV; A3 Pol, AIFQSSMTK; A3 Nef, QVPLRPMTYK; B7 Nef, TPGPGVRYPL; B8 p24, GEIYKRWII; B8 Nef, FLKEKGGL; B27 p24, KRWIILGLNK. Bottom panel: frequencies of CD8+ T cells specific for non-vaccine-derived epitopes from EBV proteins (subjects 012, 013, and 015) or HLA-B35 Nef (GPGVRYPLTF) (subject 015) at corresponding time points. (C) Representative plots (subject 015) showing expression in tetramer-reactive cells (top panels) of CD45RA and CCR7 before and 6 and 27 weeks after the first MVA.HIVA immunization. Bottom panels show profiles obtained by gating on total CD8bright lymphocytes. The fold change in each compartment within tetramer-positive populations detected in seven donors is shown in Table 3.
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TABLE 3. Relative expansion of CD8+ T-cell memory compartments in tetramer-positive populations 6 months after MVA.HIVA immunizationa
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FIG. 3. Up-regulation of CD38 on CD8+ T cells specific for vaccine-encoded epitopes. (A) Top panels: CD38 expression in KRWIILGLNK-specific T cells (gated on tetramer-positive cells as shown in Fig. 2C) from subject 015. Bottom panels: Nef-specific (epitope not in the vaccine) tetramer-positive cells from this donor showed stable levels of CD38 expression over the same period. Triangles indicate immunization times. (B) Kinetics of CD38 expression in tetramer-positive cells with different specificities (solid lines) (see Fig. 2B for specificities) and total CD8+ T cells (broken lines) obtained from seven donors before and after MVA.HIVA immunization. (C) Kinetics of perforin expression on tetramer-positive cells is similar to that of CD38. The percentage of HIV-1-specific tetramer-positive cells expressing perforin pre- and post-MVA.HIVA immunization are shown for subject 015 (representative of four vaccinees). The percentage of total CD8+ cells expressing perforin remained stable over this time (6% [not shown]).
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-secreting CD4+ T cells throughout the study. A CD4+ T-cell proliferative response to one of the peptide pools was just detectable in one of the control subjects, 019, at the corresponding time point. Proliferation was assessed immediately before and at three post-MVA.HIVA immunization time points in the DNA/MVA group (Fig. 4B and C). A significant CD8+ T-cell proliferative response to Gag peptides, defined as a cell division index of >3, developed in three vaccinees (001, 004, and 010), while in three with preexisting positive responses, these increased at least fourfold after vaccination (005, 006, and 009). CD4+ T-cell proliferative responses were induced or amplified in 001, 004, 005, 006, 007, and 010. Subject 002 did not show increased responses, and 009 is still under evaluation.
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FIG. 4. Proliferative capacity of Gag-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells postimmunization. Proliferation was determined by flow cytometric analysis of CFSE dilution after 6-day in vitro culture with HIVA peptide pools 1 to 4 (A) or pool 90 (B and C). (A) Percentage of CFSElo CD3+ CD8+ cells (top panel) or CFSElo CD3+ CD4+ cells (bottom panel) from six subjects at the time the peak response was detected by ELISPOT, i.e., after one (subject 022) or two (subjects 015, 016, 018, 019, and 021) MVA.HIVA immunizations (weeks 2 and 8, respectively). Values from unstimulated samples have been subtracted. Responses shown were at least three times the unstimulated control sample value. No responses to pool 4 were seen. (B) Representative plots showing total Gag-specific (pool 90 peptides) CD8+ T-cell proliferation, after gating on CD3+ lymphocytes, of subject 006 at the time points indicated. Representative positive (staphylococcal enterotoxin B [SEB]) and negative (medium alone) control responses at day zero are also shown for comparison. (C) Total Gag-specific proliferative responses before and after MVA.HIVA immunization of eight vaccinees who had received pTHr.HIVA vaccine 2 years earlier. Cell division index = [% CD8+ (top panels) or CD4+ (bottom panels) CFSElo cells in CD3+ lymphocyte gates obtained after peptide stimulation]/(% obtained from unstimulated samples).
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The amplification of both Gag-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells that we observed following MVA.HIVA vaccination contrasts with the findings of another therapeutic study with recombinant MVA-Nef, where little or no effect on CD8+ T-cell responses was observed (8). This could be due to several factors, including the dose and route of immunization and the assay used to measure CD8+ T-cell responses, or it may reflect differences in the capacity of recombinant MVA vaccines to boost Gag- versus Nef-specific responses in chronically infected individuals. Spontaneous variations in individual patients' preexisting HIV-1-specific responses cannot be completely ruled out without more control subjects, but we believe this is unlikely for several reasons. First, the kinetics of these responses, with ex vivo Gag-specific IFN-
-secreting T-cell responses peaking at 1 to 2 weeks after each immunization, are consistent with data from other recombinant MVA vaccine studies (23, 24). Second, minimal variation was seen in two unvaccinated control subjects monitored simultaneously. Third, we compared the peak responses to MVA.HIVA with those seen after immunization of 10 HAART-treated patients with a DNA vaccine expressing the same immunogen (pTHr.HIVA) in a previous study (11). Ex vivo Gag-specific IFN-
responses immediately prior to pTHr.HIVA and to MVA.HIVA (>2 years after the DNA vaccinations in subjects 001 to 010) were not significantly different (medians, 831 and 1,508 SFU/106 PBMC, respectively; P = 0.13), and responses 28 days after the second dose of each vaccine (day 56 for MVA.HIVA and day 49 for pTHr.HIVA) were much greater in the MVA.HIVA arm (medians, 380 and 2,751; P = 0.005).
Of note, CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses post-MVA.HIVA vaccination were increased not only in magnitude but also in breadth, with targeting of CD8+ T-cell epitopes in Nef, Pol, and Env proteins which were expressed in the epitope string, together with conserved regions of the Gag protein which are known to be frequently recognized by diverse ethnic populations (12), and of previously unrecognized Gag epitopes. This indicates that it is possible to boost responses to subdominant T-cell epitopes with a recombinant MVA vaccine. As the volunteers in this study had all progressed to AIDS or had developed low CD4 T-cell counts prior to the study, it is likely that they would harbor CD8+ T-cell escape mutants which could emerge if antiretroviral therapy were interrupted. For a therapeutic vaccine to be effective, it will be necessary to elicit T cells which can suppress the autologous virus variants, and this may require T cells with broad specificity and clonality (30, 34, 35). Our data suggest that it may be possible to refocus HIV-1-specific T-cell responses by vaccination, even in chronically infected individuals with diverse virus subtypes and genetic backgrounds.
By contrast with the transient responses detected by IFN-
ELISPOT, tetramer studies showed that MVA.HIVA-driven CD8+ T-cell expansions, which involved different memory compartments, were more durable. Up-regulation of the activation marker CD38 within days of vaccination predicted the development of sustained CD8+ T-cell responses. Low frequencies of activated virus-specific CD8+ T cells at this time point predicted little or no expansion of these cells at subsequent time points. This was evident in both intra- and interindividual analyses comparing CD8+ T cells specific for different vaccine-encoded epitopes and for epitopes not included in the vaccine. Expression of CD38 on CD8+ T cells is a marker of viral replication in acute or untreated chronically infected individuals (26), but it is highly unlikely that the changes we observed were due to enhanced viral replication, since plasma HIV-1 RNA was undetectable in the vaccinees throughout the study. The effect of MVA.HIVA immunization on perforin expression in CD8+ T cells may also be important, since a previous study showed that vaccine-stimulated CD8+ perforin-expressing T cells were positively correlated with viral suppression (22). However, the rapid declines in perforin-expressing and, to a lesser extent, IFN-
-secreting CD8+ T cells suggest that these cells do not remain fully functional in the absence of the antigenic stimulation provided by vaccination, or they may indicate activation-induced apoptosis. The capacity of these long-lived vaccine-driven CD8+ T cells to differentiate rapidly into fully functional effectors may be a critical factor in the control of virus rebound after withdrawal of antiretroviral therapy. We observed predominant expansion in the CCR7+ CD45RA compartment, which has proliferative potential (6), and obtained direct evidence for vaccine-driven CD8+ T-cell proliferation in the majority of vaccinees. Together, these observations suggest that our vaccination strategy could alter the composition of the HIV-1-specific CD8+ T-cell memory pool. A prophylactic vaccination study in macaques suggested that the kinetics of viral replication in relation to CD8+ T-cell division and differentiation may be crucial to preventing established infection (9). The magnitude or quality of cellular responses required to prevent infection may be different from that needed to suppress viral replication during chronic infection, but this question will need to be addressed in future studies involving vaccination followed by analytical therapy interruption.
To date, there have been no studies comparing the immunogenicity of different virus-vectored vaccines (e.g., MVA, canary pox virus, and NYVAC) in HIV-1-infected individuals. Recombinant canary pox virus (ALVAC)-vectored vaccines have undergone more extensive evaluation in humans than other poxvirus-based vaccines, and immunogenicity and preliminary efficacy data in HIV-1-infected individuals are encouraging, with evidence of a positive correlation between virological control and vaccine-stimulated CD4+-cell proliferative responses (21, 39). However, the response rate observed in these studies using the criterion of lymphoproliferation (50 to 60%) indicates that there is a need to improve the immunogenicity of this vaccine. Our preliminary data indicate that MVA.HIVA stimulated proliferation of both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in 75% of vaccinees. This could be an underestimate, as significant proliferation detected in a conventional thymidine incorporation assay may not be detected in a CFSE assay using the cell division index cutoff of >3, which was our criterion for a positive response in this study (12a). As CD4+ T cells with proliferative and interleukin-2-secreting capacities are more abundant in patients with better virological control (15, 42), these parameters merit further scrutiny in therapeutic vaccination studies as potential correlates of vaccine-mediated control of HIV-1, and we are currently optimizing assays to detect them.
The influence of prior DNA vaccination on responses to MVA.HIVA in this study is uncertain, owing to the small number of subjects studied. Comparison of the volunteers given MVA alone and MVA 2 years after DNA vaccination showed no differences in the magnitude or breadth of either CD8+ or CD4+ T-cell responses detected by IFN-
ELISPOT assay. The peak response was more likely to be attained after the first MVA vaccination in the DNA/MVA group and after the second immunization in the MVA-alone group, suggesting that DNA vaccination enhanced the efficiency of MVA vaccination. It is unlikely that a DNA vaccine would prime T-cell responses more effectively than HIV-1 itself. However, DNA vaccination has been shown to enhance the immunogenicity of a recombinant fowl pox virus/SIV vaccine in SIV-infected macaques (31). Prime-boost immunization schedules with recombinant DNA and MVA vaccines expressing the same immunogen efficiently prime CD4 T-cell responses in HIV-uninfected individuals (12a, 23). A more detailed analysis in a larger cohort is needed to assess the value of including DNA vaccines in therapeutic immunization strategies.
In conclusion, this study shows that a recombinant MVA vaccine, administered during HAART, efficiently expands both CD8+ and CD4+ T cells with a favorable functional profile for containing virus replication. Supervised therapy interruptions will enable us to discern possible correlations between T-cell phenotype, function, and decay rate and viral rebound kinetics. This is essential for optimizing the immunogenicity of candidate vaccines and for elucidation of immunological correlates of virus control.
This study was sponsored and funded by the UK Medical Research Council with additional funding from ORVACS. L.D. is the recipient of a UK MRC Clinician Scientist Fellowship.
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+ IL-2+ and CD28+ IL-2+ CD4 T cell responses is associated with nonprogression in HIV-1 infection. J. Immunol. 169:6376-6385.This article has been cited by other articles:
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