Abstract

The importance of a balanced TH1/TH2 humoral immune response against the HIV-1 envelope protein (Env) for antibody-mediated HIV-1 control is increasingly recognized. However, there is no defined vaccination strategy to raise it. Since immune checkpoints are involved in the induction of adoptive immunity and their inhibitors (monoclonal antibodies) are licensed for cancer therapy, we investigated the effect of checkpoint blockade after HIV-1 genetic vaccination on enhancement and modulation of antiviral antibody responses. By intraperitoneal administration of checkpoint antibodies in mice we observed an induction of anti-drug antibodies which may interfere with immunomodulation by checkpoint inhibitors. Therefore, we blocked immune checkpoints locally by co-electroporation of DNA vaccines encoding the active soluble ectodomains of programmed cell death protein-1 (PD-1) or its ligand (PD-L1), respectively. Plasmid-encoded immune checkpoints did not elicit a detectable antibody response, suggesting no interference with their immunomodulatory effects. Co-electroporation of a HIV-1 DNA vaccine formulation with soluble PD-L1 ectodomain increased HIV-1 Env-specific TH1 CD4 T cell and IgG2a antibody responses. The overall antibody response was hereby shifted towards a more TH1/TH2 balanced subtype pattern. These findings indicate that co-electroporation of soluble checkpoint ectodomains together with DNA-based vaccines has modulatory effects on vaccine-induced immune responses that could improve vaccine efficacies.

Highlights

  • Even after more than 30 years of vaccine research, the development of a prophylactic HIV-1 vaccine is still facing serious obstacles

  • We reported that immunization of mice against HIV-1 envelope protein (Env) with both protein and DNA

  • Two days after each immunization, mice were treated with either PBS, an isotype control, or monoclonal antibodies directed against PD-1 or its ligands PD-L1 and PD-L2 according to published protocols (Figure 1A) [23,24]

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Summary

Introduction

Even after more than 30 years of vaccine research, the development of a prophylactic HIV-1 vaccine is still facing serious obstacles. Efficacy trials data on immune responses that correlate with reduced risk of HIV-1 infection are limited [1]. Env-specific IgG3 antibodies (IgG subclass in humans that is associated with TH 1-response [6]) further showed an enhanced virion internalization activity in monocytes compared to other antibody isotypes [7]. These data demonstrate that the antibody subtype pattern elicited after vaccination may play a crucial role in mediating antibody-directed effector functions eventually resulting in viral clearance

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