Low-dose penile SIVmac251 exposure of rhesus macaques infected with adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) and then immunized with a replication-defective Ad5-based SIV gag/pol/nef vaccine recapitulates the results of the phase IIb step trial of a similar HIV-1 vaccine.

Huma Qureshi, Zhong-Min Ma, Ying Huang, Gregory Hodge, Michael A Thomas, Janet DiPasquale, Veronique DeSilva, Linda Fritts, Andrew J Bett, Danilo R Casimiro, John W Shiver, Marjorie Robert-Guroff, Michael N Robertson, Michael B McChesney, Peter B Gilbert, Christopher J Miller

Center for Comparative Medicine, University of California, Davis, California, USA.

Journal Article: Journal of virology (impact factor: 5.15). 12/2011; 86(4):2239-50. DOI: 10.1128/JVI.06175-11

Abstract

The Step Trial showed that the MRKAd5 HIV-1 subtype B Gag/Pol/Nef vaccine did not protect men from HIV infection or reduce setpoint plasma viral RNA (vRNA) levels but, unexpectedly, it did modestly enhance susceptibility to HIV infection in adenovirus type 5 (Ad5)-seropositive, uncircumcised men. As part of the process to understand the results of the Step Trial, we designed a study to determine whether rhesus macaques chronically infected with a host-range mutant Ad5 (Ad5hr) and then immunized with a replication defective Ad5 SIVmac239 Gag/Pol/Nef vaccine were more resistant or susceptible to SIV infection than unimmunized rhesus macaques challenged with a series of escalating dose penile exposures to SIVmac 251. The Ad5 SIV vaccine induced CD8(+) T cell responses in 70% of the monkeys, which is similar to the proportion of humans that responded to the vaccine in the Step Trial. However, the vaccine did not protect vaccinated animals from penile SIV challenge. At the lowest SIV exposure dose (10(3) 50% tissue culture infective doses), 2 of 9 Ad5-seropositive animals immunized with the Ad5 SIV vaccine became infected compared to 0 of 34 animals infected in the other animal groups (naive animals, Ad5-seropositive animals immunized with the empty Ad5 vector, Ad5-seronegative animals immunized with the Ad5 SIV vaccine, and Ad5-seronegative animals immunized with the empty Ad5 vector). Penile exposure to more concentrated virus inocula produced similar rates of infection in all animal groups. Although setpoint viral loads were unaffected in Step vaccinees, the Ad5 SIV-immunized animals had significantly lower acute-phase plasma vRNA levels compared to unimmunized animals. Thus, the results of the nonhuman primate (NHP) study described here recapitulate the lack of protection against HIV acquisition seen in the Step Trial and suggest a greater risk of infection in the Ad5-seropositive animals immunized with the Ad5 SIV vaccine. Further studies are necessary to confirm the enhancement of virus acquisition and to discern associated mechanisms.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

9 Ad5-seropositive animals immunized
 
Ad5 SIV vaccine
 
Ad5 SIV-immunized animals
 
Ad5-seronegative animals immunized
 
Ad5-seropositive animals immunized
 
adenovirus type 5
 
animal groups
 
concentrated virus inocula
 
dose penile exposures
 
empty Ad5 vector
 
host-range mutant Ad5
 
MRKAd5 HIV-1 subtype B Gag/Pol/Nef vaccine
 
penile SIV challenge
 
replication defective Ad5 SIVmac239 Gag/Pol/Nef vaccine
 
rhesus macaques chronically
 
setpoint viral loads
 
similar rates
 
Step vaccinees
 
uncircumcised men
 
unimmunized rhesus macaques