Primate Monocytes - CD14, CD16 - Ziegler-Heitbrock

Contact

Intradermal but not intramuscular modified vaccinia Ankara immunizations protect against intravaginal tier2 simian-human immunodeficiency virus challenges in female macaques.

Abstract

Route of immunization can markedly influence the quality of immune response. Here, we show that intradermal (ID) but not intramuscular (IM) modified vaccinia Ankara (MVA) vaccinations provide protection from acquisition of intravaginal tier2 simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) challenges in female macaques. Both routes of vaccination induce comparable levels of serum IgG with neutralizing and non-neutralizing activities. The protection in MVA-ID group correlates positively with serum neutralizing and antibody-dependent phagocytic activities, and envelope-specific vaginal IgA; while the limited protection in MVA-IM group correlates only with serum neutralizing activity. MVA-ID immunizations induce greater germinal center Tfh and B cell responses, reduced the ratio of Th1 to Tfh cells in blood and showed lower activation of intermediate monocytes and inflammasome compared to MVA-IM immunizations. This lower innate activation correlates negatively with induction of Tfh responses. These data demonstrate that the MVA-ID vaccinations protect against intravaginal SHIV challenges by modulating the innate and T helper responses.

Authors: Bollimpelli VS, Reddy PBJ, Gangadhara S, Charles TP, Burton SL, Tharp GK, Styles TM, Labranche CC, Smith JC, Upadhyay AA, Sahoo A, Legere T, Shiferaw A, Velu V, Yu T, Tomai M, Vasilakos J, Kasturi SP, Shaw GM, Montefiori D, Bosinger SE, Kozlowski PA, Pule
Journal: Nat Commun;2023Aug08; 14 (1) 4789. doi:10.1038/s41467-023-40430-7
Year: 2023
PubMed: PMID: 37553348 (Go to PubMed)