Abstract

Extracellular Tat (eTat) plays an important role in HIV-1 pathogenesis. The presence of anti-Tat antibodies is negatively correlated with disease progression, hence making Tat a potential vaccine candidate. The cytotoxicity and moderate immunogenicity of Tat however remain impediments for developing Tat-based vaccines. Here, we report a novel strategy to concurrently enhance the immunogenicity and safety profile of Tat. The grafting of universal helper T-lymphocyte (HTL) epitopes, Pan DR Epitope (PADRE) and Pol711 into the cysteine rich domain (CRD) and the basic domain (BD) abolished the transactivation potential of the Tat protein. The HTL-Tat proteins elicited a significantly higher titer of antibodies as compared to the wild-type Tat in BALB/c mice. While the N-terminal epitope remained immunodominant in HTL-Tat immunizations, an additional epitope in exon-2 was recognized with comparable magnitude suggesting a broader immune recognition. Additionally, the HTL-Tat proteins induced cross-reactive antibodies of high avidity that efficiently neutralized exogenous Tat, thus blocking the activation of a Tat-defective provirus. With advantages such as presentation of multiple B-cell epitopes, enhanced antibody response and importantly, transactivation-deficient Tat protein, this approach has potential application for the generation of Tat-based HIV/AIDS vaccines.

Highlights

  • Transactivator of transcription (Tat) of HIV-1 is essential for the viral gene expression and infectivity [1,2,3]

  • Studies suggest that Tat-gp120 interaction facilitates viral entry into cells [18, 20] and interfering with this interaction can be a potential avenue for HIV vaccines

  • We demonstrate that helper T-lymphocyte (HTL)-Tat protein immunizations elicit qualitatively and quantitatively superior antibody responses in mice

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Summary

Introduction

Transactivator of transcription (Tat) of HIV-1 is essential for the viral gene expression and infectivity [1,2,3]. Neutralization of eTat could be an important objective, making Tat a potential vaccine candidate. Humoral and cell-mediated immune responses to Tat protect subjects from disease progression [7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]. A pilot study showed that an HIV vaccine based on both the Tat and Env proteins could efficiently control an intrarectal Simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) challenge [19]. Studies suggest that Tat-gp120 interaction facilitates viral entry into cells [18, 20] and interfering with this interaction can be a potential avenue for HIV vaccines

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