Abstract

Successful vaccination against cancer and infectious diseases relies on the induction of adaptive immune responses that induce high-titer antibodies or potent cytoxic Tcell responses. In contrast to humoral vaccines, the amplification of cellular immune responses is often hampered by anti-vector immunity that either pre-exists or develops after repeated homologous vaccination. Replication-defective lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) vectors represent a novel generation of vaccination vectors that induce potent immune responses while escaping recognition by neutralizing antibodies. Here, we characterize the CD8 Tcell immune response induced by replication-defective recombinant LCMV (rLCMV) vectors with regard to expansion kinetics, trafficking, phenotype, and function and we perform head-to-head comparisons of the novel rLCMV vectors with established vectors derived from adenovirus, vaccinia virus, or Listeria monocytogenes. Our results demonstrate that replication-deficient rLCMV vectors are safe and ideally suited for both homologous and heterologous vaccination regimens to achieve optimal amplification of CD8 Tcell immune responses invivo.

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