Glycoprotein exchange vectors based on vesicular stomatitis virus allow effective boosting and generation of neutralizing antibodies to a primary isolate of human immunodeficiency virus type 1

被引:125
作者
Rose, NF
Roberts, A
Buonocore, L
Rose, JK
机构
[1] Yale Univ, Sch Med, Dept Pathol, New Haven, CT 06510 USA
[2] Yale Univ, Sch Med, Dept Cell Biol, New Haven, CT 06510 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1128/JVI.74.23.10903-10910.2000
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Live recombinant vesicular stomatitis viruses (VSVs) expressing foreign antigens are highly effective vaccine vectors. However, these vectors induce high-titer neutralizing antibody directed at the single VSV glycoprotein (G), and this antibody alone can prevent reinfection and boosting with the same vector. To determine if efficient boosting could be achieved by changing the G protein of the vector, we have developed two new recombinant VSV vectors based on the VSV Indiana serotype but with the G protein gene replaced with G genes from two other VSV serotypes, New Jersey and Chandipura. These G protein exchange vectors grew to titers equivalent to wild-type VSV and induced similar neutralizing titers to themselves but no cross-neutralizing antibodies to the other two serotypes. The effectiveness of these recombinant VSV vectors was illustrated in experiments in which sequential boosting of mice with the three vectors, all encoding the same primary human immunodeficiency virus (HM envelope protein, gave a fourfold increase in antibody titer to an oligomeric HIV envelope compared with the response in animals receiving the same vector three times. In addition, only the animals boosted with the exchange vectors produced antibodies neutralizing the autologous HIV primary isolate. These VSV envelope exchange vectors have potential as vaccines in immunizations when boosting of immune responses may be essential.
引用
收藏
页码:10903 / 10910
页数:8
相关论文
共 42 条
[1]   Approaches to improve engineered vaccines for human immunodeficiency virus and other viruses that cause chronic infections [J].
Berzofsky, JA ;
Ahlers, JD ;
Derby, MA ;
Pendleton, CD ;
Arichi, T ;
Belyakov, IM .
IMMUNOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 1999, 170 :151-172
[2]   Replication-competent rhabdoviruses with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 coats and green fluorescent protein: Entry by a pH-independent pathway [J].
Boritz, E ;
Gerlach, J ;
Johnson, JE ;
Rose, JK .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1999, 73 (08) :6937-6945
[3]   A vaccine for HIV type 1: The antibody perspective [J].
Burton, DR .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1997, 94 (19) :10018-10023
[4]   Neutralization profiles of primary human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolates in the context of coreceptor usage [J].
Cecilia, D ;
Kewalramani, VN ;
O'Leary, J ;
Volsky, B ;
Nyambi, P ;
Burda, S ;
Xu, S ;
Littman, DR ;
Zolla-Pazner, S .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1998, 72 (09) :6988-6996
[5]   AN INFECTIOUS MOLECULAR CLONE OF AN UNUSUAL MACROPHAGE-TROPIC AND HIGHLY CYTOPATHIC STRAIN OF HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS TYPE-1 [J].
COLLMAN, R ;
BALLIET, JW ;
GREGORY, SA ;
FRIEDMAN, H ;
KOLSON, DL ;
NATHANSON, N ;
SRINIVASAN, A .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1992, 66 (12) :7517-7521
[6]   PROTECTIVE EFFECTS OF A LIVE ATTENUATED SIV VACCINE WITH A DELETION IN THE NEF GENE [J].
DANIEL, MD ;
KIRCHHOFF, F ;
CZAJAK, SC ;
SEHGAL, PK ;
DESROSIERS, RC .
SCIENCE, 1992, 258 (5090) :1938-1941
[7]   A dual-tropic primary HIV-1 isolate that uses fusin and the beta-chemokine receptors CKR-5, CKR-3, and CKR-2b as fusion cofactors [J].
Doranz, BJ ;
Rucker, J ;
Yi, YJ ;
Smyth, RJ ;
Samson, M ;
Peiper, SC ;
Parmentier, M ;
Collman, RG ;
Doms, RW .
CELL, 1996, 85 (07) :1149-1158
[8]  
DULANEY JT, 1978, MOL CELL BIOCHEM, V21, P43
[9]   NATIVE OLIGOMERIC HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS TYPE-1 ENVELOPE GLYCOPROTEIN ELICITS DIVERSE MONOCLONAL-ANTIBODY REACTIVITIES [J].
EARL, PL ;
BRODER, CC ;
LONG, D ;
LEE, SA ;
PETERSON, J ;
CHAKRABARTI, S ;
DOMS, RW ;
MOSS, B .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1994, 68 (05) :3015-3026
[10]  
FELLOWES ON, 1955, AM J VET RES, V16, P623