Filskov Jonathan, Mikkelsen Marianne, Hansen Paul R, Christensen Jan P, Thomsen Allan R, Andersen Peter, Bukh Jens, Agger Else Marie
Copenhagen Hepatitis C Program (CO-HEP), Department of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Research Centre, Copenhagen University Hospital, Hvidovre, Denmark.
Department of Infectious Disease Immunology, Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark.
J Virol. 2017 Jun 26;91(14). doi: 10.1128/JVI.00130-17. Print 2017 Jul 15.
Despite the introduction of effective drugs to treat patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, a vaccine would be the only means to substantially reduce the worldwide disease burden. An incomplete understanding of how HCV interacts with its human host and evades immune surveillance has hampered vaccine development. It is generally accepted that in infected individuals, a narrow repertoire of exhausted T cells is a hallmark of persistent infection, whereas broad, vigorous CD4 and CD8 T cell responses are associated with control of acute hepatitis C. We employed a vaccine approach based on a mixture of peptides (pepmix) spanning the entire sequence of HCV nonstructural protein 3 (NS3) in cross-priming cationic liposomes (CAF09) to facilitate a versatile presentation of all possible T cell epitopes, regardless of the HLA background of the vaccine recipient. Here, we demonstrate that vaccination of mice with NS3 pepmix broadens the repertoire of epitope-specific T cells compared to the corresponding recombinant protein (rNS3). Moreover, vaccination with rNS3 induced only CD4 T cells, whereas the NS3 pepmix induced a far more vigorous CD4 T cell response and was as potent a CD8 T cell inducer as an adenovirus-vectored vaccine expressing NS3. Importantly, the cellular responses are dominated by multifunctional T cells, such as gamma interferon-positive (IFN-γ) tumor necrosis factor alpha-positive (TNF-α) coproducers, and displayed cytotoxic capacity in mice. In conclusion, we present a novel vaccine approach against HCV, inducing a broadened T cell response targeting both immunodominant and potential subdominant epitopes, which may be key elements to counter T cell exhaustion and prevent chronicity. With at least 700,000 annual deaths, development of a vaccine against hepatitis C virus (HCV) has high priority, but the tremendous ability of the virus to dodge the human immune system poses great challenges. Furthermore, many chronic infections, including HCV infection, have a remarkable ability to drive initially strong CD4 and CD8 T cell responses against dominant epitopes toward an exhausted, dysfunctional state. Thus, new and innovative vaccine approaches to control HCV should be evaluated. Here, we report on a novel peptide-based nanoparticle vaccine strategy (NS3 pepmix) aimed at generating T cell immunity against potential subdominant T cell epitopes that are not efficiently targeted by vaccination with full-length recombinant protein (rNS3) or infection with HCV. As proof of concept, we found that NS3 pepmix excels in broadening the repertoire of epitope-specific, multifunctional, and cytotoxic CD4 and CD8 T cells compared to vaccination with rNS3, which generated only CD4 T cell responses.
尽管已引入有效药物治疗慢性丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染患者,但疫苗仍是大幅降低全球疾病负担的唯一手段。对HCV如何与人类宿主相互作用以及如何逃避免疫监视的不完全理解阻碍了疫苗的研发。人们普遍认为,在受感染个体中,数量有限的耗竭T细胞是持续感染的标志,而广泛、活跃的CD4和CD8 T细胞反应与急性丙型肝炎的控制相关。我们采用了一种基于肽混合物(pepmix)的疫苗方法,该肽混合物涵盖HCV非结构蛋白3(NS3)的整个序列,负载于交叉呈递阳离子脂质体(CAF09)中,以促进所有可能的T细胞表位的通用呈递,而不考虑疫苗接种者的HLA背景。在此,我们证明,与相应的重组蛋白(rNS3)相比,用NS3 pepmix对小鼠进行疫苗接种可拓宽表位特异性T细胞的库。此外,用rNS3进行疫苗接种仅诱导CD4 T细胞,而NS3 pepmix诱导的CD4 T细胞反应更为活跃,并且作为CD8 T细胞诱导剂的效力与表达NS3的腺病毒载体疫苗相当。重要的是,细胞反应以多功能T细胞为主,如γ干扰素阳性(IFN-γ)肿瘤坏死因子α阳性(TNF-α)共产生细胞,并在小鼠中表现出细胞毒性能力。总之,我们提出了一种针对HCV的新型疫苗方法,可诱导针对免疫显性和潜在亚显性表位的广泛T细胞反应,这可能是对抗T细胞耗竭和预防慢性化的关键因素。每年至少有70万人死于丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染,因此开发针对HCV的疫苗具有高度优先性,但该病毒躲避人类免疫系统的巨大能力带来了巨大挑战。此外,许多慢性感染,包括HCV感染,具有将最初针对显性表位的强烈CD4和CD8 T细胞反应驱动至耗竭、功能失调状态的显著能力。因此,应评估控制HCV的新型创新疫苗方法。在此,我们报告了一种基于肽的新型纳米颗粒疫苗策略(NS3 pepmix),旨在产生针对潜在亚显性T细胞表位的T细胞免疫,而全长重组蛋白(rNS3)疫苗接种或HCV感染无法有效靶向这些表位。作为概念验证,我们发现与rNS3疫苗接种相比,NS3 pepmix在拓宽表位特异性、多功能和细胞毒性CD4和CD8 T细胞的库方面表现出色,rNS3疫苗接种仅产生CD4 T细胞反应。