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Directly injected lentiviral vector–based T cell vaccine protects mice against acute and chronic viral infection
Takuya Tada, Thomas D. Norton, Rebecca Leibowitz, Nathaniel R. Landau
Takuya Tada, Thomas D. Norton, Rebecca Leibowitz, Nathaniel R. Landau
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Research Article Immunology Vaccines

Directly injected lentiviral vector–based T cell vaccine protects mice against acute and chronic viral infection

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Abstract

Lentiviral vector–based dendritic cell vaccines induce protective T cell responses against viral infection and cancer in animal models. In this study, we tested whether preventative and therapeutic vaccination could be achieved by direct injection of antigen-expressing lentiviral vector, obviating the need for ex vivo transduction of dendritic cells. Injected lentiviral vector preferentially transduced splenic dendritic cells and resulted in long-term expression. Injection of a lentiviral vector encoding an MHC class I–restricted T cell epitope of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) and CD40 ligand induced an antigen-specific cytolytic CD8+ T lymphocyte response that protected the mice from infection. The injection of chronically infected mice with a lentiviral vector encoding LCMV MHC class I and II T cell epitopes and a soluble programmed cell death 1 microbody rapidly cleared the virus. Vaccination by direct injection of lentiviral vector was more effective in sterile alpha motif and HD-domain containing protein 1–knockout (SAMHD1-knockout) mice, suggesting that lentiviral vectors containing Vpx, a lentiviral protein that increases the efficiency of dendritic cell transduction by inducing the degradation of SAMHD1, would be an effective strategy for the treatment of chronic disease in humans.

Authors

Takuya Tada, Thomas D. Norton, Rebecca Leibowitz, Nathaniel R. Landau

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Figure 2

APCs, including B cells, monocytes, and DCs, were transduced.

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APCs, including B cells, monocytes, and DCs, were transduced.
(A) Wild-t...
(A) Wild-type and SAMHD1-KO mice injected with 3 × 107 IU of GFP-expressing lentivirus. After 3 (left) or 7 days (right), the mice were sacrificed, and splenocytes were stained with antibodies against CD3, CD4, CD8, CD19, CD49b, CD11c, CD115, and MHCII and analyzed by flow cytometry. The proportion of GFP+CD4+ T cells (CD3+CD4+), CD8+ T cells (CD3+CD8+), B cells (CD3–CD19+), NK cells (CD3–CD49b+), monocytes (CD115–CD11b+), and DCs (CD11c+MHCII+) was quantified as shown in the histograms. (B) The fraction of GFP+ cells of each of the cell types for the wild-type and SAMHD1-KO mice on day 3 (left) and day 7 (right) is shown as a pie chart with the percentage of each cell type in parentheses.

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