Modulation of Disease, T Cell Responses, and Measles Virus Clearance in Monkeys Vaccinated with H-Encoding Alphavirus Replicon Particles

Measles remains a major worldwide problem partly because of difficulties with vaccination of young infants. New vaccine strategies need to be safe and to provide sustained protective immunity. We have developed Sindbis virus replicon particles that express the measles virus (MV) hemagglutinin (SIN-H...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2005-08, Vol.102 (33), p.11581-11588
Hauptverfasser: Pan, Chien-Hsiung, Valsamakis, Alexandra, Colella, Teresa, Nair, Nitya, Adams, Robert J., Polack, Fernando P., Greer, Catherine E., Perri, Silvia, Polo, John M., Griffin, Diane E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Measles remains a major worldwide problem partly because of difficulties with vaccination of young infants. New vaccine strategies need to be safe and to provide sustained protective immunity. We have developed Sindbis virus replicon particles that express the measles virus (MV) hemagglutinin (SIN-H) or fusion (SIN-F) proteins. In mice, SIN-H induced high-titered, dose-dependent, MV-neutralizing antibody after a single vaccination. SIN-F, or SIN-H and SIN-F combined, induced somewhat lower responses. To assess protective efficacy, juvenile macaques were vaccinated with a single dose of 106or 108SIN-H particles and infant macaques with two doses of 108particles. A dose of 108particles induced sustained levels of high-titered, MV-neutralizing antibody and IFN-γ-producing memory T cells, and most monkeys were protected from rash when challenged with wild-type MV 18 months later. After challenge, there was a biphasic appearance of H- and F-specific IFN-γ-secreting CD4+and CD8+T cells in vaccinated monkeys, with peaks ≈1 and 3-4 months after challenge. Viremia was cleared within 14 days, but MV RNA was detectable for 4-5 months. These studies suggest that complete clearance of MV after infection is a prolonged, phased, and complex process influenced by prior vaccination.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0504592102