Abstract
The gp120-derived V3 loop of HIV-1 is involved in co-receptor
interaction, it guides cell tropism, and contains an epitope for
antibody neutralization. Thus, HIV-1 V3 is an attractive vaccine
candidate. The V3 of the MN strain (MN V3) contains both B- and
T-cell epitopes, including a known mouse H-2d-restricted cytotoxic
T lymphocyte (CTL) epitope. In an attempt to improve the
immunogenicity of V3 in DNA vaccines, a plasmid expressing MN V3
as a fusion protein with the highly immunogenic middle (pre-S2+S)
surface antigen of hepatitis B virus (HBsAg) was constructed.
Epidermal inoculation by gene gun was used for genetic
immunization in a mouse model. Antibody and CTL responses to MN V3
and HBsAg were measured and compared with the immune responses
obtained after vaccination with plasmids encoding the complete
HIV-1 MN gp160 and HBsAg (pre-S2+S), respectively. DNA vaccination
with the HIV MN gp160 envelope plasmid induced a slow and low
titred anti-MN V3 antibody response at 12 weeks post-inoculation
(p.i.) and a late appearing (7 weeks), weak and variable CTL
response. In contrast, DNA vaccination with the HBsAg-encoding
plasmid induced a rapid and high titred anti-HBsAg antibody
response and a uniform strong anti-HBs CTL response already 1 week
p.i. in all mice. DNA vaccination with the chimeric MN V2/HBsAg
plasmid elicited humoral responses against both viruses within 3-6
weeks which peaked at 6-12 weeks and remained stable for at least
25 weeks. In addition, specific CTL responses were induced in all
mice against both MN V3 and HBsAg already within the first 3
weeks, lasting at least 11 weeks. Thus, HBsAg acts as a `genetic
vaccine adjuvant' augmenting and accelerating the cellular and
humoral immune response against the inserted MN V3 loop. Such
chimeric HIV-HbsAg plasmid constructs may be useful in DNA
immunizations as a `carrier' of protein regions or minimal
epitopes, which are less exposed or poorly immunogenic.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Scandinavian Journal of Immunology |
| Volume | 47 |
| Pages (from-to) | 289-295 |
| ISSN | 0300-9475 |
| Publication status | Published - 1998 |
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
-
SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being
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