53 research outputs found

    Protective Immunity against Respiratory Syncytial Virus in Early Life after Murine Maternal or Neonatal Vaccination with the Recombinant G Fusion Protein BBG2Na

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    Maternal and neonatal immunization were evaluated for their capacity to induce protective immunity against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) lower respiratory tract infections in early life. Murine models were studied by use of a novel recombinant vaccine candidate, designated BBG2Na, which was derived in part from the RSV (Long) G protein. Maternal immunization resulted in the passive transfer of high levels of RSV-A antibodies to the offspring, which protected them from RSV challenge for up to 14 weeks. Indeed, protection correlated with the detection of RSV antibodies in the serum. Neonatal immunization with BBG2Na induced significant antibody responses even in the first week of life. Most importantly, these neonatal responses were not inhibited by the presence of RSV maternal antibodies. Consequently, the combination of maternal and neonatal immunization with BBG2Na resulted in the continual presence of protective levels of antibodies in the offsprin

    Protective Efficacy against Respiratory Syncytial Virus following Murine Neonatal Immunization with BBG2Na Vaccine: Influence of Adjuvants and Maternal Antibodies

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    Alum-adsorbed BBG2Na, a recombinant vaccine derived in part from the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) subgroup A G protein, induced moderate antibody titers after 1 immunization in 1-week-old mice but conferred complete lung protection upon RSV challenge. The anti-BBG2Na IgG1-IgG2a neonatal isotype profile was suggestive of dominant Th2 responses compared with those in adults. Formulation of BBG2Na with a Th1-driving adjuvant efficiently shifted neonatal responses toward a more balanced and adultlike IgG1-IgG2a profile without compromising its protective efficacy. BBG2Na-induced protective immunity was maintained even after early life immunization in the presence of high titers of maternal antibodies. Under these conditions, the protective efficacy (86%-100%) reflected the high capacity of the nonglycosylated G2Na immunogen to escape inhibition by RSV-A—induced maternal antibodies. Thus, immunization with BBG2Na protected against viral challenge despite neonatal immunologic immaturity and the presence of maternal antibodies, two major obstacles to neonatal RSV vaccine developmen

    Dynamics of the bacterially expressed conserved immunogenic region of the human respiratory syncytial virus G protein.

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    Despite all efforts, there is still no effective vaccine available against the human respiratory syncytial virus (HRSV) that is a major cause of severe lower respiratory tract disease in infants and the elderly. In this review, we examined the potential of the conserved immunogenic region (residues 122-226) of the HRSV glycoprotein G alone as the inducer of neutralizing antibodies against this virus. The Escherichia coli produced recombinant conserved region of G (designated as G domain), which was used for rabbit immunization. Although rabbit is a semipermissive host for HRSV, our result showed that the polyclonal antibodies against the G domain protein could strongly neutralize the virus (69.3%), suggesting that the G immunogenic region of HRSV alone has a great potential in vaccine development. To our knowledge, this is the first report in which neutralizing antibodies to respiratory syncytial virus have been evoked using bacterially expressed G immunogenic domain protein without any adjuvant

    Sub-Nucleocapsid Nanoparticles: A Nasal Vaccine against Respiratory Syncytial Virus

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    Background: Bronchiolitis caused by the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in infants less than two years old is a growing public health concern worldwide, and there is currently no safe and effective vaccine. A major component of RSV nucleocapsid, the nucleoprotein (N), has been so far poorly explored as a potential vaccine antigen, even though it is a target of protective anti-viral T cell responses and is remarkably conserved between human RSV A and B serotypes. We recently reported a method to produce recombinant N assembling in homogenous rings composed of 10–11 N subunits enclosing a bacterial RNA. These nanoparticles were named sub-nucleocapsid ring structure (N SRS). Methodology and Principal Findings: The vaccine potential of N SRS was evaluated in a well-characterized and widely acknowledged mouse model of RSV infection. BALB/c adult mice were immunized intranasally with N SRS adjuvanted with the detoxified E. coli enterotoxin LT(R192G). Upon RSV challenge, vaccinated mice were largely protected against virus replication in the lungs, with a mild inflammatory lymphocytic and neutrophilic reaction in their airways. Mucosal immunization with N SRS elicited strong local and systemic immunity characterized by high titers of IgG1, IgG2a and IgA anti-N antibodies, antigen-specific CD8+ T cells and IFN-c-producing CD4+ T cells. Conclusions/Significance: This is the first report of using nanoparticles formed by the recombinant nucleocapsid protein as an efficient and safe intra-nasal vaccine against RSV

    Alum Adjuvant Enhances Protection against Respiratory Syncytial Virus but Exacerbates Pulmonary Inflammation by Modulating Multiple Innate and Adaptive Immune Cells

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    Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is well-known for inducing vaccine-enhanced respiratory disease after vaccination of young children with formalin-inactivated RSV (FI-RSV) in alum formulation. Here, we investigated alum adjuvant effects on protection and disease after FIRSV immunization with or without alum in comparison with live RSV reinfections. Despite viral clearance, live RSV reinfections caused weight loss and substantial pulmonary inflammation probably due to high levels of RSV specific IFN-γ+IL4-, IFN-γ-TNF-α+, IFN-γ+ TNF-α- effector CD4 and CD8 T cells. Alum adjuvant significantly improved protection as evidenced by effective viral clearance compared to unadjuvanted FI-RSV. However, in contrast to unadjuvanted FI-RSV, alum-adjuvanted FI-RSV (FI-RSV-A) induced severe vaccine- enhanced RSV disease including weight loss, eosinophilia, and lung histopathology. Alum adjuvant in the FI-RSV-A was found to be mainly responsible for inducing high levels of RSV-specific IFN-γ-IL4+, IFN-γ-TNF-α+ CD4+ T cells, and proinflammatory cytokines IL-6 and IL-4 as well as B220+ plasmacytoid and CD4+ dendritic cells, and inhibiting the induction of IFN-γ+CD8 T cells. This study suggests that alum adjuvant in FI-RSV vaccines increases immunogenicity and viral clearance but also induces atypical T helper CD4+ T cells and multiple inflammatory dendritic cell subsets responsible for vaccine-enhanced severe RSV disease

    Complement-dependent cytotoxic antibodies to human T lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I)-infected cells in the sera of HTLV-I-infected individuals

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    To investigate whether HTLV-I induces the development of complement-dependent cytotoxic antibodies in humans, sera of asymptomatic HTLV-I carriers and of patients suffering from tropical spastic paraparesis/HTLV-I-associated myelopathy (TSP/HAM) or adult T cell leukaemia (ATL) were used in a cytotoxicity assay against a panel of target cells. This panel included uninfected cell lines (CEM, Jurkat, Molt and H9), cell lines chronically infected with HTLV-I (MT2, MT4, C91PL and HUT102), as well as lines H36 (H9 infected with HTLV-I), H9-IIIB (H9 infected with HIVIIIB) and H9-MN (H9 infected with HIVMN). HTLV-I+ sera induced lysis of H36 and of lines expressing HTLV-I antigens in the presence of rabbit complement, but did not lyse cells in presence of human complement. The HTLV-I+ sera also failed to lyse the HTLV-I− lines and H9 cells, suggesting that lysis was specific for HTLV-I. H36 cell lysis was prevented by IgG depletion of the sera and by dialysis of rabbit complement against EGTA or EDTA. Rabbit complement-dependent cytotoxic antibodies were present in the sera of 14/14 HTLV-I-infected individuals; the highest titres were predominantly found in the sera of the TSP/HAM patients. Such antibodies were also detected in 5/5 individuals coinfected with HIV-1 and HTLV-I, although no cytotoxic antibody could be found against HIV-infected cells. Vice versa, sera of HIV-1-infected individuals did not exert a lytic effect in the presence of complement (of human or rabbit origin) against HIV-1- or HTLV-I-infected cells. Incubation of the sera of four HTLV-I-infected patients with HTLV-I env-specific synthetic peptides demonstrated that some of the complement-dependent cytotoxic antibodies recognized epitopes located on gp46 between amino acids 190 and 209. There is no correlation of rabbit complement-dependent cytotoxic HTLV-I antibodies with the development of disease
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