A variety of methods have been explored to increase delivery efficiencies for DNA vaccine. However, the immunogenicity of DNA vaccines has not been satisfactorily improved. Unlike most of the previous attempts, we provided evidence suggesting that changing the injection site successively (successively site-translocated inoculation, SSTI) could significantly enhance the immunogenicity of DNA vaccines in a previous study. To simplify the strategy and to evaluate its impact on candidate SARS-CoV-2 vaccines, we immunized mice with either a SARS-CoV-2 spike-based DNA vaccine or a spike protein subunit vaccine three different inoculation strategies. Our data demonstrated that S protein specific antibody responses elicited by the DNA vaccine or the protein subunit vaccine showed no significant difference among different inoculation strategies. Of interest, compared with the conventional site fixed inoculation (SFI), both successive site-translocating inoculation (SSTI) and the simplified translocating inoculation (STI) strategy improved specific T cell responses elicited by the DNA vaccine. More specifically, the SSTI strategy significantly improved both the monofunctional (IFN-γIL-2TNF-αCD8) and the multifunctional (IFN-γIL-2TNF-αCD8, IFN-γIL-2TNF-αCD4, IFN-γIL-2TNF-αCD4) T cell responses, while the simplified translocating inoculation (STI) strategy significantly improved the multifunctional CD8 (IFN-γIL-2TNF-αCD8, IFN-γIL-2TNF-αCD8) and CD4 (IFN-γIL-2TNF-αCD4, IFN-γIL-2TNF-αCD4) T cell responses. The current study confirmed that changing the site of intra muscular injection can significantly improve the immunogenicity of DNA vaccines.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9062103PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.875236DOI Listing

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