Heterologous prime-boost regimens with HAdV-5 and NDV vectors elicit stronger immune responses to Ebola virus than homologous regimens in mice.

Arch Virol

Institute for Immunization and Prevention, Beijing Center for Disease Prevention and Control, Beijing Research Center for Preventive Medicine, No. 16, Hepingli Middle Street, Dongcheng District, Beijing, 100013, China.

Published: December 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa resulted in over 11,000 deaths, highlighting the urgent need for an effective vaccine.
  • A phase I clinical trial of an adenovirus-based Ebola vaccine showed a strong antibody response but a weaker immune response necessary for long-term protection, primarily due to pre-existing immunity to the adenovirus vector.
  • Researchers developed a Newcastle disease virus (NDV) vaccine that, when combined with the adenovirus vaccine in different order, produced stronger immune responses in mice than the conventional booster methods, suggesting a potential new strategy for enhancing Ebola vaccine effectiveness.

Article Abstract

The 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa resulted in more than 11,000 deaths, highlighting the need for a vaccine. A phase I clinical trial of a human adenovirus type 5 vector-based Ebola virus (EBOV) vaccine (HAdV-5-MakGP) showed that a homologous prime-boost regimen with HAdV-5 vaccine elicited a robust humoral response but a weak cellular immune response. Due to pre-existing anti-vector immunity, boosting with the same vaccine did not increase the magnitude of the cellular immune response, which contributes significantly to protection against EBOV infection. Here, we generated a recombinant Newcastle disease virus (NDV), based on the LaSota vaccine strain, expressing the GP protein of the EBOV variant Makona (rLS/EB-GP) using reverse genetics technology. The humoral and cellular immune responses to this vaccine candidate in mice immunized using a homologous prime-boost regimen or a heterologous prime-boost regimen with the HAdV-5-vectored Ebola vaccine were assessed using ELISA and ELISPOT assays. The ELISA and ELISPOT results showed that mice primed with rLS/EB-GP and boosted with HAdV-5-MakGP (NDV+HAdV-5) or, reversed, primed with HAdV-5-MakGP and boosted with rLS/EB-GP (HAdV-5+NDV) exhibited more-potent EBOV GP-specific antibody and cellular immune responses than those receiving the same vaccine twice. The most robust EBOV GP-specific antibody and T-cell responses were detected in the HAdV-5-MakGP-primed and rLS/EB-GP-boosted (HAdV-5+NDV) mice. These results suggest that the HAdV-5 prime-NDV boost regimen is more effective in stimulating EBOV-specific immunity than homologous regimens alone, indicating the potential boosting ability of the NDV vector in human vaccine use.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8482741PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00705-021-05234-4DOI Listing

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