A CD46-binding chimpanzee adenovirus vector as a vaccine carrier

Nia Tatsis, Ariella Blejer, Marcio O Lasaro, Scott E Hensley, Ann Cun, Lello Tesema, Yan Li, Guang-Ping Gao, Zhi Q Xiang, Dongming Zhou, James M Wilson, Hildegund C J Ertl, Nia Tatsis, Ariella Blejer, Marcio O Lasaro, Scott E Hensley, Ann Cun, Lello Tesema, Yan Li, Guang-Ping Gao, Zhi Q Xiang, Dongming Zhou, James M Wilson, Hildegund C J Ertl

Abstract

A replication-defective chimeric vector based on the chimpanzee adenovirus serotype C1 was developed and tested as a vaccine carrier in mice. The AdC1 virus is closely related to human adenoviruses of subgroup B2 and uses CD46 for cell attachment. To overcome poor growth of E1-deleted AdC1 vectors on cell lines that provide the E1 of adenovirus of the human serotype 5 (AdHu5) virus in trans, the inverted terminal repeats and some of the early genes of AdC1 were replaced with those from AdC5, a chimpanzee origin adenovirus of subfamily E. The chimeric AdC1/C5 vector efficiently transduces CD46-expressing mouse dendritic cells (DCs) in vitro and initiates their maturation. Transduction of DCs in vivo is inefficient in CD46 transgenic mice. The AdC1/C5 vector induces transgene product-specific B- and CD8(+) T-cell responses in mice. Responses are slightly higher in wild-type mice than in CD46 transgenic mice. Transgene product-specific T-cell responses elicited by the AdC1/C5 vector can be increased by priming or boosting with a heterologous adenovirus vector. Pre-existing immunity to adenovirus of the common human serotype 5 does not affect induction of cell-mediated immune responses by the AdC1/C5 vector. This vector provides an additional tool in a repertoire of adenovirus-based vaccine vectors.

Source: PubMed

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