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Pre-Existing Vector Immunity Does Not Prevent Replication Deficient Adenovirus from Inducing Efficient CD8 T-Cell Memory and Recall Responses

Adenoviral vectors have shown a great potential for vaccine development due to their inherent ability to induce potent and protective CD8 T-cell responses. However, a critical issue regarding the use of these vectors is the existence of inhibitory immunity against the most commonly used Ad5 vector i...

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Autores principales: Steffensen, Maria Abildgaard, Jensen, Benjamin Anderschou Holbech, Holst, Peter Johannes, Bassi, Maria Rosaria, Christensen, Jan Pravsgaard, Thomsen, Allan Randrup
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3326056/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22514686
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0034884
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author Steffensen, Maria Abildgaard
Jensen, Benjamin Anderschou Holbech
Holst, Peter Johannes
Bassi, Maria Rosaria
Christensen, Jan Pravsgaard
Thomsen, Allan Randrup
author_facet Steffensen, Maria Abildgaard
Jensen, Benjamin Anderschou Holbech
Holst, Peter Johannes
Bassi, Maria Rosaria
Christensen, Jan Pravsgaard
Thomsen, Allan Randrup
author_sort Steffensen, Maria Abildgaard
collection PubMed
description Adenoviral vectors have shown a great potential for vaccine development due to their inherent ability to induce potent and protective CD8 T-cell responses. However, a critical issue regarding the use of these vectors is the existence of inhibitory immunity against the most commonly used Ad5 vector in a large part of the human population. We have recently developed an improved adenoviral vaccine vector system in which the vector expresses the transgene tethered to the MHC class II associated invariant chain (Ii). To further evaluate the potential of this system, the concept of pre-existing inhibitory immunity to adenoviral vectors was revisited to investigate whether the inhibition previously seen with the Ad5 vector also applied to the optimized vector system. We found this to be the case, and antibodies dominated as the mechanism underlying inhibitory vector immunity. However, presence of CD8 T cells directed against epitopes in the adenoviral vector seemed to correlate with repression of the induced response in re-vaccinated B-cell deficient mice. More importantly, despite a repressed primary effector CD8 T-cell response in Ad5-immune animals subjected to vaccination, memory T cells were generated that provided the foundation for an efficient recall response and protection upon subsequent viral challenge. Furthermore, the transgene specific response could be efficiently boosted by homologous re-immunization. Taken together, these studies indicate that adenoviral vectors can be used to induce efficient CD8 T-cell memory even in individuals with pre-existing vector immunity.
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spelling pubmed-33260562012-04-18 Pre-Existing Vector Immunity Does Not Prevent Replication Deficient Adenovirus from Inducing Efficient CD8 T-Cell Memory and Recall Responses Steffensen, Maria Abildgaard Jensen, Benjamin Anderschou Holbech Holst, Peter Johannes Bassi, Maria Rosaria Christensen, Jan Pravsgaard Thomsen, Allan Randrup PLoS One Research Article Adenoviral vectors have shown a great potential for vaccine development due to their inherent ability to induce potent and protective CD8 T-cell responses. However, a critical issue regarding the use of these vectors is the existence of inhibitory immunity against the most commonly used Ad5 vector in a large part of the human population. We have recently developed an improved adenoviral vaccine vector system in which the vector expresses the transgene tethered to the MHC class II associated invariant chain (Ii). To further evaluate the potential of this system, the concept of pre-existing inhibitory immunity to adenoviral vectors was revisited to investigate whether the inhibition previously seen with the Ad5 vector also applied to the optimized vector system. We found this to be the case, and antibodies dominated as the mechanism underlying inhibitory vector immunity. However, presence of CD8 T cells directed against epitopes in the adenoviral vector seemed to correlate with repression of the induced response in re-vaccinated B-cell deficient mice. More importantly, despite a repressed primary effector CD8 T-cell response in Ad5-immune animals subjected to vaccination, memory T cells were generated that provided the foundation for an efficient recall response and protection upon subsequent viral challenge. Furthermore, the transgene specific response could be efficiently boosted by homologous re-immunization. Taken together, these studies indicate that adenoviral vectors can be used to induce efficient CD8 T-cell memory even in individuals with pre-existing vector immunity. Public Library of Science 2012-04-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3326056/ /pubmed/22514686 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0034884 Text en Steffensen et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Steffensen, Maria Abildgaard
Jensen, Benjamin Anderschou Holbech
Holst, Peter Johannes
Bassi, Maria Rosaria
Christensen, Jan Pravsgaard
Thomsen, Allan Randrup
Pre-Existing Vector Immunity Does Not Prevent Replication Deficient Adenovirus from Inducing Efficient CD8 T-Cell Memory and Recall Responses
title Pre-Existing Vector Immunity Does Not Prevent Replication Deficient Adenovirus from Inducing Efficient CD8 T-Cell Memory and Recall Responses
title_full Pre-Existing Vector Immunity Does Not Prevent Replication Deficient Adenovirus from Inducing Efficient CD8 T-Cell Memory and Recall Responses
title_fullStr Pre-Existing Vector Immunity Does Not Prevent Replication Deficient Adenovirus from Inducing Efficient CD8 T-Cell Memory and Recall Responses
title_full_unstemmed Pre-Existing Vector Immunity Does Not Prevent Replication Deficient Adenovirus from Inducing Efficient CD8 T-Cell Memory and Recall Responses
title_short Pre-Existing Vector Immunity Does Not Prevent Replication Deficient Adenovirus from Inducing Efficient CD8 T-Cell Memory and Recall Responses
title_sort pre-existing vector immunity does not prevent replication deficient adenovirus from inducing efficient cd8 t-cell memory and recall responses
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3326056/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22514686
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0034884
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