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The current control strategies employing chemotherapy with diethylcarbamazine, ivermectin and albendazole have reduced transmission in some filaria-endemic areas, there is growing interest for complementary approaches, such as vaccines especially in light of threat of parasite developing resistance to mainstay drugs. We earlier demonstrated recombinant heavy chain myosin of B. malayi (Bm-Myo) as a potent vaccine candidate whose efficacy was enhanced by heterologous DNA prime/protein boost (Myo-pcD+Bm-Myo) vaccination in BALB/c mice. BALB/c mouse though does not support the full developmental cycle of B. malayi, however, the degree of protection may be studied in terms of transformation of challenged infective larvae (L3) to next stage (L4) with an ease of delineating the generated immunological response of host. In the current investigation, DNA vaccination with Bm-Myo was therefore undertaken in susceptible rodent host, Mastomys coucha (M. coucha) which sustains the challenged L3 and facilitates their further development to sexually mature adult parasites with patent microfilaraemia. Immunization schedule consisted of Myo-pcD and Myo-pcD+Bm-Myo followed by B. malayi L3 challenge and the degree of protection was evaluated by observing microfilaraemia as well as adult worm establishment. Myo-pcD+Bm-Myo immunized animals not only developed 78.5% reduced blood microfilarial density but also decreased adult worm establishment by 75.3%. In addition, 75.4% of the recovered live females revealed sterilization over those of respective control animals. Myo-pcD+Bm-Myo triggered higher production of specific IgG and its isotypes which induced marked cellular adhesion and cytotoxicity (ADCC) to microfilariae (mf) and L3 in vitro. Both Th1 and Th2 cytokines were significantly up-regulated displaying a mixed immune response conferring considerable protection against B. malayi establishment by engendering a long-lasting effective immune response and therefore emerges as a potential vaccination method against LF. 相似文献
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Wibke Bayer Matthias Tenbusch Ruth Lietz Lena Johrden Simone Schimmer Klaus überla Ulf Dittmer Oliver Wildner 《Journal of virology》2010,84(4):1967-1976
We present a new type of adenoviral vector that both encodes and displays a vaccine antigen on the capsid, thus combining in itself gene-based and protein vaccination; this vector resulted in an improved vaccination outcome in the Friend virus (FV) model. For presentation of the envelope protein gp70 of Friend murine leukemia virus on the adenoviral capsid, gp70 was fused to the adenovirus capsid protein IX. When compared to vaccination with conventional FV Env- and Gag-encoding adenoviral vectors, vaccination with the adenoviral vector that encodes and displays pIX-gp70 combined with an FV Gag-encoding vector resulted in significantly improved protection against systemic FV challenge infection, with highly controlled viral loads in plasma and spleen. This improved protection correlated with improved neutralizing antibody titers and stronger CD4+ T-cell responses. Using a vector that displays gp70 without encoding it, we found that while the antigen display on the capsid alone was sufficient to induce high levels of binding antibodies, in vivo expression was necessary for the induction of neutralizing antibodies. This new type of adenovirus-based vaccine could be a valuable tool for vaccination.Adenoviruses have been a focus of interest as vaccine vectors for more than a decade and have been tested in various preclinical and clinical studies for vaccination against viral and bacterial infections (reviewed in reference 38). This interest is based on the ability of adenoviral vectors to induce high antibody titers and robust cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) responses and on the high immunogenicity of the vector, which might have an adjuvant effect on vaccination (17). Adenoviral vectors have also been extensively evaluated for immunization against HIV (reviewed in reference 1), where they were used either alone or in combination with plasmid DNA or protein in prime-boost immunizations. However, vaccination with adenoviral vectors against HIV showed no effectiveness in a large phase IIb study (4), but it is conceivable that the observed lack of effectiveness was due to the choice of vaccine antigen rather than the vector itself, as the vaccine relied exclusively on the induction of CTL responses, and the outcome was unexpected given previous results from studies in nonhuman primates (33, 42). The findings of the phase IIb study brought about a shift of focus from the CTL response to a more balanced immune response, including neutralizing antibodies, that is now expected to be necessary for protection from HIV infection.Apart from adenoviral vectors that encode vaccine antigens, there have also been approaches to modify adenoviral capsid proteins to include antigenic epitopes. These were mostly inserted into external loops of the hexon protein (5, 22, 25, 26, 43), which is the main component of the adenovirus capsid, but also other components of the capsid, such as fiber, protein IX, and penton base, have been evaluated (22). These studies showed that incorporation of single epitopes into capsid proteins of adenovirus leads to induction of antibody and CD4+ T-cell responses, suggesting that incorporation of epitopes into the adenovirus capsid is a useful tool for epitope-based vaccination.Fusion of a polylysine sequence or an arginine-glycine-aspartic acid motif to adenovirus pIX has been shown to be a tool for redirection of adenovirus tropism to heparan sulfate and αvβ integrins, respectively (9, 41). By fusing green fluorescent protein and luciferase to the C terminus of pIX, it was shown that relatively large proteins can be displayed on the adenovirus capsid while maintaining the protein''s conformation and function as well as virion integrity (24, 28).Here we describe a novel vaccination approach that combines genetic and protein vaccination by using adenoviral vectors not only as gene expression vectors but also as nanoparticle carriers for a vaccine antigen to improve the vaccination efficiency through enhanced induction of antibodies. Display of the vaccine antigen on the adenovirus capsid was achieved by fusion of the antigen to the C terminus of the adenovirus capsid protein pIX. It was shown before that the presentation of antigens in ordered arrays leads to improved antibody responses by cross-linking of B-cell receptors (13). As the adenoviral capsid is highly structured, we hypothesized that fusion to pIX would result in an ordered display of the antigen, presumably facilitating antibody induction.We evaluated this vaccine approach using the Friend virus (FV) infection model. FV is an immunosuppressive retroviral complex that consists of Friend murine leukemia virus (F-MuLV) and the replication-deficient, F-MuLV-dependent spleen focus-forming virus. FV infection of susceptible mice induces rapid polyclonal erythroblast proliferation, which leads to splenic enlargement and erythroleukemia and takes a lethal course also in adult mice (14). Protection from FV infection has been shown to require complex immune responses involving antibodies as well as CD4+ and CD8+ T cells (7). FV is regarded as a useful retrovirus infection model because basic requirements for vaccine protection seem to be similar for FV and HIV infection (8). We demonstrated previously that the FV model is suitable to evaluate and improve adenoviral vectors for antiretroviral vaccination (2), as we showed that a heterologous prime-boost vaccination with adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) and fiber chimeric Ad5F35 vectors led to better protection from FV infection than homologous vaccination, which correlated with improved induction of neutralizing antibodies.For vaccination with expression/display vectors against FV we constructed a fusion protein of the adenoviral capsid protein pIX and the F-MuLV envelope protein gp70 and produced adenoviral vectors expressing the pIX-gp70 fusion protein, which was incorporated into the viral capsid. We vaccinated FV-susceptible CB6F1 hybrid mice with antigen expression/display vectors or with conventional antigen-expressing adenoviral vectors and analyzed the protection conferred by these two vaccines. Having demonstrated that the expression/display vector leads to better protection of mice from FV challenge, we constructed a panel of expression/display vectors displaying different fusion proteins containing F-MuLV Env or Gag in order to elucidate the underlying immunological mechanisms of the improved protection conferred by the adenoviral expression/display vectors. 相似文献
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Abstract: The dopaminergic phenotype of neurons in human substantia nigra deteriorates during normal aging, and loss of these neurons is prominent in Parkinson's disease. These degenerative processes are hypothesized to involve oxidative stress. To compare oxidative stress in the nigra and related regions, we measured carbonyl modifications of soluble proteins in postmortem samples of substantia nigra, basal ganglia, and prefrontal cortex from neurologically normal subjects, using an improved 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine assay. The protein carbonyl content was found to be about twofold higher in substantia nigra pars compacta than in the other regions. To further analyze this oxidative damage, the distribution of carbonyl groups on soluble proteins was determined by western immunoblot analysis. This method revealed that carbonyl content of the major proteins in each region was linearly dependent on molecular weight. This distribution raises the possibility that protein carbonyl content is controlled by a size-dependent mechanism in vivo. Our results suggest that oxidative stress is elevated in human substantia nigra pars compacta in comparison with other regions and that oxidative damage is higher within the dopaminergic neurons. Elevated oxidative damage may contribute to the degeneration of nigral dopaminergic neurons in aging and in Parkinson's disease. 相似文献