Intranasal multivalent adenoviral-vectored vaccine protects against replicating and dormant M.tb in conventional and humanized mice

鼻内多价腺病毒载体疫苗可预防常规小鼠和人源化小鼠中复制和休眠的结核分枝杆菌

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作者:Sam Afkhami, Michael R D'Agostino, Maryam Vaseghi-Shanjani, Madeleine Lepard, Jack X Yang, Rocky Lai, Margaret Wa Yan Choi, Alexis Chacon, Anna Zganiacz, Kees L M C Franken, Hildegund C Ertl, Tom H M Ottenhoff, Mangalakumari Jeyanathan, Amy Gillgrass, Zhou Xing

Abstract

Viral-vectored vaccines are highly amenable for respiratory mucosal delivery as a means of inducing much-needed mucosal immunity at the point of pathogen entry. Unfortunately, current monovalent viral-vectored tuberculosis (TB) vaccine candidates have failed to demonstrate satisfactory clinical protective efficacy. As such, there is a need to develop next-generation viral-vectored TB vaccine strategies which incorporate both vaccine antigen design and delivery route. In this study, we have developed a trivalent chimpanzee adenoviral-vectored vaccine to provide protective immunity against pulmonary TB through targeting antigens linked to the three different growth phases (acute/chronic/dormancy) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) by expressing an acute replication-associated antigen, Ag85A, a chronically expressed virulence-associated antigen, TB10.4, and a dormancy/resuscitation-associated antigen, RpfB. Single-dose respiratory mucosal immunization with our trivalent vaccine induced robust, sustained tissue-resident multifunctional CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses within the lung tissues and airways, which were further quantitatively and qualitatively improved following boosting of subcutaneously BCG-primed hosts. Prophylactic and therapeutic immunization with this multivalent trivalent vaccine in conventional BALB/c mice provided significant protection against not only actively replicating M.tb bacilli but also dormant, non-replicating persisters. Importantly, when used as a booster, it also provided marked protection in the highly susceptible C3HeB/FeJ mice, and a single respiratory mucosal inoculation was capable of significant protection in a humanized mouse model. Our findings indicate the great potential of this next-generation TB vaccine strategy and support its further clinical development for both prophylactic and therapeutic applications.

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