Replication-Competent NYVAC-KC Yields Improved Immunogenicity to HIV-1 Antigens in Rhesus Macaques Compared to Nonreplicating NYVAC

与非复制型NYVAC相比,具有复制能力的NYVAC-KC在恒河猴体内对HIV-1抗原表现出更高的免疫原性。

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作者:Karen V Kibler ,Benedikt Asbach ,Beatriz Perdiguero ,Juan García-Arriaza ,Nicole L Yates ,Robert Parks ,Sherry Stanfield-Oakley ,Guido Ferrari ,David C Montefiori ,Georgia D Tomaras ,Mario Roederer ,Kathryn E Foulds ,Donald N Forthal ,Michael S Seaman ,Steve Self ,Raphael Gottardo ,Sanjay Phogat ,James Tartaglia ,Susan Barnett ,Anthony D Cristillo ,Deborah Weiss ,Lindsey Galmin ,Song Ding ,Jonathan L Heeney ,Mariano Esteban ,Ralf Wagner ,Giuseppe Pantaleo ,Bertram L Jacobs

Abstract

As part of the continuing effort to develop an effective HIV vaccine, we generated a poxviral vaccine vector (previously described) designed to improve on the results of the RV144 phase III clinical trial. The construct, NYVAC-KC, is a replication-competent, attenuated recombinant of the vaccinia virus strain NYVAC. NYVAC is a vector that has been used in many previous clinical studies but is replication deficient. Here, we report a side-by-side comparison of replication-restricted NYVAC and replication-competent NYVAC-KC in a nonhuman primate study, which utilized a prime-boost regimen similar to that of RV144. NYVAC-C and NYVAC-C-KC express the HIV-1 antigens gp140, and Gag/Gag-Pol-Nef-derived virus-like particles (VLPs) from clade C and were used as the prime, with recombinant virus plus envelope protein used as the boost. In nearly every T and B cell immune assay against HIV-1, including neutralization and antibody binding, NYVAC-C-KC induced a greater immune response than NYVAC-C, indicating that replication competence in a poxvirus may improve upon the modestly successful regimen used in the RV144 clinical trial.IMPORTANCE Though the RV144 phase III clinical trial showed promise that an effective vaccine against HIV-1 is possible, a successful vaccine will require improvement over the vaccine candidate (ALVAC) used in the RV144 study. With that goal in mind, we have tested in nonhuman primates an attenuated but replication-competent vector, NYVAC-KC, in direct comparison to its parental vector, NYVAC, which is replication restricted in human cells, similar to the ALVAC vector used in RV144. We have utilized a prime-boost regimen for administration of the vaccine candidate that is similar to the one used in the RV144 study. The results of this study indicate that a replication-competent poxvirus vector may improve upon the effectiveness of the RV144 clinical trial vaccine candidate. Keywords: Gag-Pol-Nef; HIV; NYVAC; NYVAC-KC; T cell response; antibody responses; gp140; nonhuman primates; vaccines.

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