Hoffman S L, Doolan D L
Malaria Program, Naval Medical Research Center, Silver Spring, MD 20910-7500, USA.
Dev Biol (Basel). 2000;104:121-32.
To develop a multi-stage, multi-antigen, multi-immune response-inducing vaccine against malaria we have focused on DNA vaccines because of their simplicity of construction and modification, ease of mixing, and effectiveness in inducing CD8+ T cell responses. DNA malaria vaccines induce CD8+ T cell dependent protection in mice and CD8+ CTL in rhesus monkeys and humans after intramuscular needle administration. Clinical trials in normal, healthy humans are in progress or planned, assessing alternative methods and routes of administration, and the capacity of a plasmid expressing human GM-CSF to enhance the protective efficacy of a five-gene liver-stage malaria vaccine. In mice, we have demonstrated that priming with the combination of DNA plasmids encoding a Plasmodium yoelii protein and murine GM-CSF and boosting with recombinant poxvirus expressing the same P. yoelii protein induces a 30-fold increase in antigen-specific antibodies, a 10-fold increase in antigen-specific IFN-gamma spot forming cells, a significant (p<0.05) increase in protection, and the capacity to reduce the dosage of DNA by 10-100 fold, compared to immunizing with DNA alone. In Aotus monkeys priming with DNA and boosting with recombinant protein in adjuvant is more protective than homologous priming and boosting with either DNA or recombinant protein in adjuvant. Clinical trials are now planned using these immunization strategies. Because of the complexity and cost of the heterologous regimens, we are working to make DNA vaccination alone as immunogenic and protective as the prime-boost approach. Our most encouraging findings have resulted from altering codon usage from the highly A+T rich P. falciparum native sequence to that more closely resembling mammalian sequences. Although much progress is required for the development of a vaccine that provides sustainable protective immunity against malaria, a strategy using DNA vaccine technology as a core component of such a vaccine is promising.
为研发一种针对疟疾的多阶段、多抗原、能诱导多种免疫反应的疫苗,我们聚焦于DNA疫苗,因为其构建和修饰简单、易于混合,且在诱导CD8 + T细胞反应方面有效。肌肉注射DNA疟疾疫苗可在小鼠中诱导CD8 + T细胞依赖性保护,并在恒河猴和人类中诱导产生CD8 + CTL。针对正常健康人群的临床试验正在进行或已在计划中,旨在评估替代给药方法和途径,以及表达人GM - CSF的质粒增强五基因肝期疟疾疫苗保护效力的能力。在小鼠中,我们已证明,先用编码约氏疟原虫蛋白和鼠GM - CSF的DNA质粒组合进行初免,再用表达相同约氏疟原虫蛋白的重组痘病毒进行加强免疫,与单独用DNA免疫相比,抗原特异性抗体增加30倍,抗原特异性IFN - γ斑点形成细胞增加10倍,保护作用显著增强(p<0.05),且能将DNA剂量降低10 - 100倍。在夜猴中,用DNA初免并用佐剂中的重组蛋白加强免疫比用DNA或佐剂中的重组蛋白进行同源初免和加强免疫更具保护作用。目前正计划使用这些免疫策略进行临床试验。由于异源免疫方案的复杂性和成本,我们正致力于使单独的DNA疫苗接种在免疫原性和保护性上与初免 - 加强方法相当。我们最令人鼓舞的发现是,将密码子使用从富含A + T的恶性疟原虫天然序列改变为更接近哺乳动物序列。尽管要研发出一种能提供针对疟疾的可持续保护性免疫的疫苗仍需取得很大进展,但将DNA疫苗技术用作此类疫苗的核心组成部分的策略很有前景。