Durable HIV-1 antibody and T-cell responses elicited by an adjuvanted multi-protein recombinant vaccine in uninfected human volunteers
- PMID: 17049679
- DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2006.07.050
Durable HIV-1 antibody and T-cell responses elicited by an adjuvanted multi-protein recombinant vaccine in uninfected human volunteers
Abstract
Background: Use of the recombinant proteins NefTat and gp120(W61D) formulated with the AS02A adjuvant system was previously shown to protect against AIDS in a rhesus macaque SHIV animal model system.
Methods: Eighty-four HIV uninfected human participants were vaccinated intramuscularly at 0, 1, and 3 months and evaluated for safety. Immune responses were analyzed for the presence of vaccine-induced antibody and T lymphocyte responses.
Results: The vaccines were safe and well tolerated at all doses. Nef-, Tat-, and gp120-specific binding antibodies were induced in all individuals that received the respective antigen, lasting up to 9 months after the final immunization. Antibodies able to neutralize the T-cell laboratory-adapted strain of HIV-1(W61D) were detected in the majority of vacinees, but did not neutralize primary isolates. Envelope-specific antibody-dependent cell cytoxicity was detected in most of the individuals receiving gp120. Robust and persistent HIV-specific lymphoproliferative responses were detected against all subunit proteins in the majority of immunized participants. As expected, HIV-specific CD8 T-cell responses were not detected.
Conclusions: Despite the lack of primary isolate neutralizing antibody induction, the observed high frequency and magnitude of other immune responses warrant further work with this vaccine or vaccine components.
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