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Inferior immunogenicity and efficacy of respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein-based subunit vaccine candidates in aged versus young mice

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is recognized as an important cause of lower and upper respiratory tract infections in older adults, and a successful vaccine would substantially lower morbidity and mortality in this age group. Recently, two vaccine candidates based on soluble purified glycoprotein...

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Autores principales: Cayatte, Corinne, Snell Bennett, Angie, Rajani, Gaurav Manohar, Hostetler, Leigh, Maynard, Sean K., Lazzaro, Michelle, McTamney, Patrick, Ren, Kuishu, O’Day, Terrence, McCarthy, Michael P., Schneider-Ohrum, Kirsten
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5705161/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29182682
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0188708
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author Cayatte, Corinne
Snell Bennett, Angie
Rajani, Gaurav Manohar
Hostetler, Leigh
Maynard, Sean K.
Lazzaro, Michelle
McTamney, Patrick
Ren, Kuishu
O’Day, Terrence
McCarthy, Michael P.
Schneider-Ohrum, Kirsten
author_facet Cayatte, Corinne
Snell Bennett, Angie
Rajani, Gaurav Manohar
Hostetler, Leigh
Maynard, Sean K.
Lazzaro, Michelle
McTamney, Patrick
Ren, Kuishu
O’Day, Terrence
McCarthy, Michael P.
Schneider-Ohrum, Kirsten
author_sort Cayatte, Corinne
collection PubMed
description Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is recognized as an important cause of lower and upper respiratory tract infections in older adults, and a successful vaccine would substantially lower morbidity and mortality in this age group. Recently, two vaccine candidates based on soluble purified glycoprotein F (RSV F), either alone or adjuvanted with glucopyranosyl lipid A formulated in a stable emulsion (GLA-SE), failed to reach their primary endpoints in clinical efficacy studies, despite demonstrating the desired immunogenicity profile and efficacy in young rodent models. Here, one of the RSV F vaccine candidates (post-fusion conformation, RSV post-F), and a stabilized pre-fusion form of RSV F (RSV pre-F, DS-Cav1) were evaluated in aged BALB/c mice. Humoral and cellular immunogenicity elicited after immunization of naïve, aged mice was generally lower compared to young animals. In aged mice, RSV post-F vaccination without adjuvant poorly protected the respiratory tract from virus replication, and addition of GLA-SE only improved protection in the lungs, but not in nasal turbinates. RSV pre-F induced higher neutralizing antibody titers compared to RSV post-F (as previously reported) but interestingly, RSV F-specific CD8 T cell responses were lower compared to RSV post-F responses regardless of age. The vaccines were also tested in RSV seropositive aged mice, in which both antigen forms similarly boosted neutralizing antibody titers, although GLA-SE addition boosted neutralizing activity only in RSV pre-F immunized animals. Cell-mediated immune responses in the aged mice were only slightly boosted and well below levels induced in seronegative young mice. Taken together, the findings suggest that the vaccine candidates were not able to induce a strong anti-RSV immune response in recipient mice with an aged immune system, in agreement with recent human clinical trial results. Therefore, the aged mouse model could be a useful tool to evaluate improved vaccine candidates, targeted to prevent RSV disease in older adults.
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spelling pubmed-57051612017-12-08 Inferior immunogenicity and efficacy of respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein-based subunit vaccine candidates in aged versus young mice Cayatte, Corinne Snell Bennett, Angie Rajani, Gaurav Manohar Hostetler, Leigh Maynard, Sean K. Lazzaro, Michelle McTamney, Patrick Ren, Kuishu O’Day, Terrence McCarthy, Michael P. Schneider-Ohrum, Kirsten PLoS One Research Article Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is recognized as an important cause of lower and upper respiratory tract infections in older adults, and a successful vaccine would substantially lower morbidity and mortality in this age group. Recently, two vaccine candidates based on soluble purified glycoprotein F (RSV F), either alone or adjuvanted with glucopyranosyl lipid A formulated in a stable emulsion (GLA-SE), failed to reach their primary endpoints in clinical efficacy studies, despite demonstrating the desired immunogenicity profile and efficacy in young rodent models. Here, one of the RSV F vaccine candidates (post-fusion conformation, RSV post-F), and a stabilized pre-fusion form of RSV F (RSV pre-F, DS-Cav1) were evaluated in aged BALB/c mice. Humoral and cellular immunogenicity elicited after immunization of naïve, aged mice was generally lower compared to young animals. In aged mice, RSV post-F vaccination without adjuvant poorly protected the respiratory tract from virus replication, and addition of GLA-SE only improved protection in the lungs, but not in nasal turbinates. RSV pre-F induced higher neutralizing antibody titers compared to RSV post-F (as previously reported) but interestingly, RSV F-specific CD8 T cell responses were lower compared to RSV post-F responses regardless of age. The vaccines were also tested in RSV seropositive aged mice, in which both antigen forms similarly boosted neutralizing antibody titers, although GLA-SE addition boosted neutralizing activity only in RSV pre-F immunized animals. Cell-mediated immune responses in the aged mice were only slightly boosted and well below levels induced in seronegative young mice. Taken together, the findings suggest that the vaccine candidates were not able to induce a strong anti-RSV immune response in recipient mice with an aged immune system, in agreement with recent human clinical trial results. Therefore, the aged mouse model could be a useful tool to evaluate improved vaccine candidates, targeted to prevent RSV disease in older adults. Public Library of Science 2017-11-28 /pmc/articles/PMC5705161/ /pubmed/29182682 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0188708 Text en © 2017 Cayatte 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cayatte, Corinne
Snell Bennett, Angie
Rajani, Gaurav Manohar
Hostetler, Leigh
Maynard, Sean K.
Lazzaro, Michelle
McTamney, Patrick
Ren, Kuishu
O’Day, Terrence
McCarthy, Michael P.
Schneider-Ohrum, Kirsten
Inferior immunogenicity and efficacy of respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein-based subunit vaccine candidates in aged versus young mice
title Inferior immunogenicity and efficacy of respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein-based subunit vaccine candidates in aged versus young mice
title_full Inferior immunogenicity and efficacy of respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein-based subunit vaccine candidates in aged versus young mice
title_fullStr Inferior immunogenicity and efficacy of respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein-based subunit vaccine candidates in aged versus young mice
title_full_unstemmed Inferior immunogenicity and efficacy of respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein-based subunit vaccine candidates in aged versus young mice
title_short Inferior immunogenicity and efficacy of respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein-based subunit vaccine candidates in aged versus young mice
title_sort inferior immunogenicity and efficacy of respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein-based subunit vaccine candidates in aged versus young mice
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5705161/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29182682
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0188708
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