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Universal influenza DNA vaccine encoding conserved CD4 T cell epitopes protects against lethal viral challenge in HLA-DR transgenic mice
Authors:Jeff Alexander  Pamuk Bilsel  Marie-France del Guercio  Stephani Stewart  Aleksandra Marinkovic-Petrovic  Scott Southwood  Claire Crimi  Lo Vang  Les Walker  Glenn Ishioka  Vivek Chitnis  Alessandro Sette  Erika Assarsson  Drew Hannaman  Jason Botten  Mark J. Newman
Affiliation:1. Pharmexa-Epimmune, Inc., San Diego, CA, United States;2. La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology, San Diego, CA, United States;3. Ichor Medical Systems, Inc., San Diego, CA, United States;4. The University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington, VT, United States
Abstract:The goal of the present study was to design a vaccine that would provide universal protection against infection of humans with diverse influenza A viruses. Accordingly, protein sequences from influenza A virus strains currently in circulation (H1N1, H3N2), agents of past pandemics (H1N1, H2N2, H3N2) and zoonotic infections of man (H1N1, H5N1, H7N2, H7N3, H7N7, H9N2) were evaluated for the presence of amino acid sequences, motifs, that are predicted to mediate peptide epitope binding with high affinity to the most frequent HLA-DR allelic products. Peptides conserved among diverse influenza strains were then synthesized, evaluated for binding to purified HLA-DR molecules and for their capacity to induce influenza-specific immune recall responses using human donor peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). Accordingly, 20 epitopes were selected for further investigation based on their conservancy among diverse influenza strains, predicted population coverage in diverse ethnic groups and capacity to recall influenza-specific responses. A DNA plasmid encoding the epitopes was constructed using amino acid spacers between epitopes to promote optimum processing and presentation. Immunogenicity of the DNA vaccine was measured using HLA-DR4 transgenic mice and the TriGrid™ in vivo electroporation device. Vaccination resulted in peptide-specific immune responses, augmented HA-specific antibody responses and protection of HLA-DR4 transgenic mice from lethal PR8 influenza virus challenge. These studies demonstrate the utility of this vaccine format and the contribution of CD4+ T cell responses to protection against influenza infection.
Keywords:Influenza   CD4+ T cell epitopes   HA-specific antibodies
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