Sendai Virus Mucosal Vaccination Establishes Lung-Resident Memory CD8 T Cell Immunity and Boosts BCG-Primed Protection against TB in Mice
Accumulating evidence has shown the protective role of CD8+ T cells in vaccine-induced immunity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) despite controversy over their role in natural immunity. However, the current vaccine BCG is unable to induce sufficient CD8+ T cell responses, especially in the l...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Molecular therapy 2017-05, Vol.25 (5), p.1222-1233 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Accumulating evidence has shown the protective role of CD8+ T cells in vaccine-induced immunity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) despite controversy over their role in natural immunity. However, the current vaccine BCG is unable to induce sufficient CD8+ T cell responses, especially in the lung. Sendai virus, a respiratory RNA virus, is here engineered firstly as a novel recombinant anti-TB vaccine (SeV85AB) that encodes Mtb immuno-dominant antigens, Ag85A and Ag85B. A single mucosal vaccination elicited potent antigen-specific T cell responses and a degree of protection against Mtb challenge similar to the effect of BCG in mice. Depletion of CD8+ T cells abrogated the protective immunity afforded by SeV85AB vaccination. Interestingly, only SeV85AB vaccination induced high levels of lung-resident memory CD8+ T (TRM) cells, and this led to a rapid and strong recall of antigen-specific CD8+ T cell responses against Mtb challenge infection. Furthermore, when used in a BCG prime-SeV85AB boost strategy, SeV85AB vaccine significantly enhanced protection above that seen after BCG vaccination alone. Our findings suggest that CD8+ TRM cells that arise in lungs responding to this mucosal vaccination might help to protect against TB, and SeV85AB holds notable promise to improve BCG’s protective efficacy in a prime-boost immunization regimen.
Hu et al. demonstrate that a Sendai virus-based anti-tuberculosis vaccine, SeV85AB, establishes strong CD8+ resident memory T (TRM) cell immunity in the lung parenchyma when delivered intranasally. This strategy compensates for the weakness of BCG in a prime-boost model and results in markedly enhanced protection against Mycobacterium tuberculosis challenge. |
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ISSN: | 1525-0016 1525-0024 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ymthe.2017.02.018 |