Biodistribution of DNA plasmid vaccines against HIV-1, Ebola, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, or West Nile virus is similar, without integration, despite differing …

RL Sheets, J Stein, TS Manetz, C Duffy… - Toxicological …, 2006 - academic.oup.com
RL Sheets, J Stein, TS Manetz, C Duffy, M Nason, C Andrews, WP Kong, GJ Nabel…
Toxicological Sciences, 2006academic.oup.com
Abstract The Vaccine Research Center has developed a number of vaccine candidates for
different diseases/infectious agents (HIV-1, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome virus, West
Nile virus, and Ebola virus, plus a plasmid cytokine adjuvant—IL-2/Ig) based on a DNA
plasmid vaccine platform. To support the clinical development of each of these vaccine
candidates, preclinical studies have been performed in mice or rabbits to determine where
in the body these plasmid vaccines would biodistribute and how rapidly they would clear. In …
Abstract
The Vaccine Research Center has developed a number of vaccine candidates for different diseases/infectious agents (HIV-1, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome virus, West Nile virus, and Ebola virus, plus a plasmid cytokine adjuvant—IL-2/Ig) based on a DNA plasmid vaccine platform. To support the clinical development of each of these vaccine candidates, preclinical studies have been performed in mice or rabbits to determine where in the body these plasmid vaccines would biodistribute and how rapidly they would clear. In the course of these studies, it has been observed that regardless of the gene insert (expressing the vaccine immunogen or cytokine adjuvant) and regardless of the promoter used to drive expression of the gene insert in the plasmid backbone, the plasmid vaccines do not biodistribute widely and remain essentially in the site of injection, in the muscle and overlying subcutis. Even though ∼ 1014 molecules are inoculated in the studies in rabbits, by day 8 or 9 (∼ 1 week postinoculation), already all but on the order of 104–106 molecules per microgram of DNA extracted from tissue have been cleared at the injection site. Over the course of 2 months, the plasmid clears from the site of injection with only a small percentage of animals (generally 10–20%) retaining a small number of copies (generally around 100 copies) in the muscle at the injection site. This pattern of biodistribution (confined to the injection site) and clearance (within 2 months) is consistent regardless of differences in the promoter in the plasmid backbone or differences in the gene insert being expressed by the plasmid vaccine. In addition, integration has not been observed with plasmid vaccine candidates inoculated i.m. by Biojector 2000 or by needle and syringe. These data build on the repeated-dose toxicology studies performed (see companion article, Sheets et al., 2006) to demonstrate the safety and suitability for investigational human use of DNA plasmid vaccine candidates for a variety of infectious disease prevention indications.
Oxford University Press