Author
Listed:
- Mohammad Arif Rahman
(National Institutes of Health)
- Massimiliano Bissa
(National Institutes of Health)
- Hanna Scinto
(National Institutes of Health)
- Savannah E. Howe
(National Institutes of Health)
- Sarkis Sarkis
(National Institutes of Health)
- Zhong-Min Ma
(University of California)
- Anna Gutowska
(National Institutes of Health)
- Xunqing Jiang
(NYU Grossman School of Medicine)
- Christina C. Luo
(NYU Grossman School of Medicine)
- Luca Schifanella
(National Institutes of Health)
- Ramona Moles
(National Institutes of Health)
- Isabela Silva de Castro
(National Institutes of Health)
- Shraddha Basu
(Walter Reed Army Institute of Research
Inc.)
- Kombo F. N’guessan
(Walter Reed Army Institute of Research
Inc.)
- LaTonya D. Williams
(Duke University School of Medicine
Duke University School of Medicine)
- Manuel Becerra-Flores
(NYU Langone Health)
- Melvin N. Doster
(National Institutes of Health)
- Tanya Hoang
(National Institutes of Health)
- Hyoyoung Choo-Wosoba
(National Cancer Institute)
- Emmanuel Woode
(National Institutes of Health)
- Yongjun Sui
(National Institutes of Health)
- Georgia D. Tomaras
(Duke University School of Medicine
Duke University School of Medicine)
- Dominic Paquin-Proulx
(Walter Reed Army Institute of Research
Inc.)
- Mangala Rao
(Walter Reed Army Institute of Research)
- James D. Talton
(Alchem Laboratories Corporation)
- Xiang-Peng Kong
(NYU Grossman School of Medicine)
- Susan Zolla-Pazner
(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai)
- Timothy Cardozo
(NYU Langone Health)
- Genoveffa Franchini
(National Institutes of Health)
- Jay A. Berzofsky
(National Institutes of Health)
Abstract
Systemic vaccination of macaques with V1-deleted (ΔV1) envelope immunogens reduce the risk of SIVmac251 acquisition by approximately 60%, with protective roles played by V2-specific ADCC and envelope-specific mucosal IL-17+NKp44+ innate lymphoid cells (ILCs). We investigated whether increased mucosal responses to V2 benefit vaccine efficacy by delivering oral nanoparticles (NPs) that release V2-scaffolded on Typhoid Toxin B (TTB) to the large intestine. Strikingly, mucosal immunization of male macaques abrogated vaccine efficacy with control TTB or empty NPs, but vaccine efficacy of up to 47.6% was preserved with V2-TTB NPs. The deleterious effects of NPs were linked to preferential recruitment of mucosal plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs), reduction of protective mucosal NKp44+ ILCs, increased non-protective mucosal PMA/Ionomycin-induced IFN-γ+NKG2A-NKp44-ILCs, and increased levels of mucosal activated Ki67+CD4+ T cells, a potential target for virus infection. V2-TTB NP mucosal boosting rescued vaccine efficacy, likely via high avidity V2-specific antibodies mediating ADCC, and higher frequencies of mucosal NKp44+ ILCs and of ∆V1gp120 binding antibody-secreting B cells in the rectal mucosa. These findings emphasize the central role of systemic immunization and mucosal V2-specific antibodies in the protection afforded by ΔV1 envelope immunogens and encourage careful evaluation of vaccine delivery platforms to avoid inducing immune responses favorable to HIV transmission.
Suggested Citation
Mohammad Arif Rahman & Massimiliano Bissa & Hanna Scinto & Savannah E. Howe & Sarkis Sarkis & Zhong-Min Ma & Anna Gutowska & Xunqing Jiang & Christina C. Luo & Luca Schifanella & Ramona Moles & Isabel, 2024.
"Loss of HIV candidate vaccine efficacy in male macaques by mucosal nanoparticle immunization rescued by V2-specific response,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 15(1), pages 1-19, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:15:y:2024:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-024-53359-2
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-53359-2
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