San Diego Team Tests Best
Delivery
Mode for Potential HIV Vaccine
Optimized immunizations reliably elicit protective antibodies in preclinical study, marking an important milestone on the way to an effective HIV vaccine.
LA JOLLA ,
CA -- June 20, 2017 —For decades,
HIV has successfully evaded all efforts to create an effective vaccine but
researchers at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) and the La Jolla Institute
for Allergy and Immunology (LJI) are steadily inching closer. Their latest study,
published in the current issue of Immunity, demonstrates that optimizing the
mode and timing of vaccine delivery is crucial to inducing a protective immune
response in a preclinical model.
The latest findings are the culmination of years of collaborative and painstaking research by a dozen research teams centered around the development, improvement, and study of artificial protein trimers that faithfully mimic a protein spike found on the viral surface. At the core of this effort is the CHAVI-ID immunogen working group, comprised of TSRI’s own William R. Schief, Ph.D., Andrew B. Ward, Ph.D., Ian A. Wilson, D.Phil. and Richard T. Wyatt, Ph.D., in addition to Crotty andBurton . This group of laboratories in
collaboration with Darrell J. Irvine, Ph.D., professor at MIT, and Rogier W.
Sanders, Ph.D., professor at the University
of Amsterdam , provided
the cutting-edge immunogens tested in the study.
Mode for Potential HIV Vaccine
Optimized immunizations reliably elicit protective antibodies in preclinical study, marking an important milestone on the way to an effective HIV vaccine.
More than any other factors, administering the vaccine candidate
subcutaneously and increasing the time intervals between immunizations improved
the efficacy of the experimental vaccine and reliably induced neutralizing
antibodies. Neutralizing antibodies are a key component of an effective immune
response. They latch onto and inactive invading viruses before they can gain a
foothold in the body and have been notoriously difficult to generate for HIV.
“This study is an important staging point on the long
journey toward an HIV vaccine,” says TSRI Professor Dennis R. Burton, Ph.D, who
is also scientific director of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI)
Neutralizing Antibody Center
and of the National Institutes of Health’s Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine
Immunology and Immunogen Discovery (CHAVI-ID) at TSRI. “The vaccine candidates
we worked with here are probably the most promising prototypes out there, and
one will go into people in 2018,” says Burton .
“There had been a lot of big question marks and this study
was designed to get as many answers as possible before we go into human
clinical trials,” adds senior co-author Shane Crotty, Ph.D., a professor in
LJI’s Division of Vaccine Discovery. “We are confident that our results will be
predictive going forward.”
HIV has faded from the headlines, mainly because the
development of antiretroviral drugs has turned AIDS into a chronic, manageable
disease. Yet, only about half of the roughly 36.7 million people currently
infected with HIV worldwide are able to get the medicines they need to control
the virus.
At the same time, the rate of new infections has remained
stubbornly high, emphasizing the need for a preventive vaccine.
The latest findings are the culmination of years of collaborative and painstaking research by a dozen research teams centered around the development, improvement, and study of artificial protein trimers that faithfully mimic a protein spike found on the viral surface. At the core of this effort is the CHAVI-ID immunogen working group, comprised of TSRI’s own William R. Schief, Ph.D., Andrew B. Ward, Ph.D., Ian A. Wilson, D.Phil. and Richard T. Wyatt, Ph.D., in addition to Crotty and
The recombinant trimers, or SOSIPs as they are called, were
unreliable in earlier, smaller studies conducted in non-human primates.
Non-human primates, and especially rhesus macaques, are considered the most
appropriate pre-clinical model for HIV vaccine studies, because their immune
system most closely resembles that of humans.
“The animals’ immune responses, although the right kind,
weren’t very robust and a few didn’t respond at all,” explains Colin
Havenar-Daughton, Ph.D., a scientific associate in the Crotty lab. “That caused
significant concern that the immunogen wouldn’t consistently trigger an
effective immune response in all individuals in a human clinical trial.”
In an effort to reliably induce a neutralizing antibody
response, the collaborators tested multiple variations of the trimers and
immunization protocols side-by-side to determine the best strategy going
forward. Crotty and Burton and their colleagues
teamed up with Professor Dan Barouch, M.D., Ph.D., Director of the Center for
Virology and Vaccine Research at Beth
Israel Deaconess
Medical Center ,
who coordinated the immunizations.
The design of the study was largely guided by what the
collaborators had learned in a previous study via fine needling sampling of the
lymph nodes, where the scientists observed follicular helper T cells help
direct the maturation steps of antibody-producing B cells. Administering the
vaccine subcutaneously versus the more conventional intramuscular route, and
spacing the injection at 8 weeks instead of the more common 4-6 weeks, reliably
induced a strong functional immune response in all animals.
Using an osmotic pump to slowly release the vaccine over a
period of two weeks resulted in the highest neutralizing antibody titers ever
measured following SOSIP immunizations in non-human primates. While osmotic
pumps are not a practical way to deliver vaccines, they illustrate an important
point.
“Depending on how we gave the vaccine, there was a bigger
difference due to immunization route than we would have predicted,” says
Matthias Pauthner, a graduate student in Burton ’s
lab and the study’s co-lead author. “We can help translate what we know now
into the clinic.”
No comments:
Post a Comment