Impact of ChAdOx1 or DNA Prime Vaccination on Magnitude, Breadth, and Focus of MVA-Boosted Immunogen-Specific T Cell Responses

The efficacy of anti-viral T-cell vaccines may greatly depend on their ability to generate high-magnitude responses targeting a broad range of different epitopes. Recently, we created the HIV T-cell immunogen HTI, designed to generate T-cell responses to protein fragments more frequently targeted by...

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Published inVaccines (Basel) Vol. 12; no. 3; p. 279
Main Authors Olvera, Alex, Romero-Martin, Luis, Oriol-Tordera, Bruna, Rosas-Umbert, Miriam, Escribà, Tuixent, Mothe, Beatriz, Brander, Christian
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland MDPI AG 01.03.2024
MDPI
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ISSN2076-393X
2076-393X
DOI10.3390/vaccines12030279

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Summary:The efficacy of anti-viral T-cell vaccines may greatly depend on their ability to generate high-magnitude responses targeting a broad range of different epitopes. Recently, we created the HIV T-cell immunogen HTI, designed to generate T-cell responses to protein fragments more frequently targeted by HIV controllers. In the present study, we aim to maximize the breadth and magnitude of the T-cell responses generated by HTI by combining different vaccine vectors expressing HTI. We evaluated the ability to induce strong and broad T-cell responses to the HTI immunogen through prime vaccination with DNA plasmid (D) or Chimpanzee Adenovirus Ox1 (ChAdOx1; C) vectors, followed by a Modified Virus Ankara (MVA; M) vaccine boost (DDD, DDDM, C, and CM). HTI-specific T-cell responses after vaccination were measured by IFN-γ-ELISpot assays in two inbred mice strains (C57BL/6 and BALB/c). CM was the schedule triggering the highest magnitude of the response in both mice strains. However, this effect was not reflected in an increase in the breadth of the response but rather in an increase in the magnitude of the response to specific immunodominant epitopes. Immunodominance profiles in the two mouse strains were different, with a clear dominance of T-cell responses to a Pol-derived peptide pool after CM vaccination in C57BL/6. Responses to CM vaccination were also maintained at higher magnitudes over time (13 weeks) compared to other vaccination regimens. Thus, while a ChAdOx1 prime combined with MVA booster vaccination generated stronger and more sustained T-cell responses compared to three DNA vaccinations, the ChAdOx1 primed responses were more narrowly targeted. In conclusion, our findings suggest that the choice of vaccine vectors and prime-boost regimens plays a crucial role in determining the strength, duration, breadth, and focus of T-cell responses, providing further guidance for selecting vaccination strategies.
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Current address: Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University, 8200 Aarhus, Denmark.
Current address: Institut Pasteur, 75015 Paris, France.
ISSN:2076-393X
2076-393X
DOI:10.3390/vaccines12030279