Abstract

Adenoviral vectors have been used for a variety of vaccine applications including cancer and infectious diseases. Traditionally, Ad-based vaccines are designed to express antigens through transgene expression of a given antigen. For effective vaccine development it is often necessary to express or present multiple antigens to the immune system to elicit an optimal vaccine as observed preclinically with mosaic/polyvalent HIV vaccines or malaria vaccines. Due to the wide flexibility of Ad vectors they are an ideal platform for expressing large amounts of antigen and/or polyvalent mosaic antigens. Ad vectors that display antigens on their capsid surface can elicit a robust humoral immune response, the “antigen capsid-incorporation” strategy. The adenoviral hexon protein has been utilized to display peptides in the majority of vaccine strategies involving capsid incorporation. Based on our abilities to manipulate hexon HVR2 and HVR5, we sought to manipulate HVR1 in the context of HIV antigen display for the first time ever. More importantly, peptide incorporation within HVR1 was utilized in combination with other HVRs, thus creating multivalent vectors. To date this is the first report where dual antigens are displayed within one Ad hexon particle. These vectors utilize HVR1 as an incorporation site for a seven amino acid region of the HIV glycoprotein 41, in combination with six Histidine incorporation within HVR2 or HVR5. Our study illustrates that these multivalent antigen vectors are viable and can present HIV antigen as well as His6 within one Ad virion particle. Furthermore, mouse immunizations with these vectors demonstrate that these vectors can elicit a HIV and His6 epitope-specific humoral immune response.

Highlights

  • There has been a tremendous amount of progress with respect to infectious disease containment worldwide

  • Antigen incorporation within HVR1 was utilized in combination with antigen incorporation at other hypervariable region (HVR), creating multivalent vectors

  • The HIV antigen, KWAS was chosen as a disease-specific antigen to incorporate within the Ad hexon because it is derived from HIV envelope protein gp41

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Summary

Introduction

There has been a tremendous amount of progress with respect to infectious disease containment worldwide. Safe and effective vaccines are needed to protect against many infections, including malaria, HIV, and tuberculosis As it relates to recombinant adenovirus vaccine candidates against the pathogens mentioned, antigens are expressed as transgenes intracellularly after the vector infects a subset of cells. Due to the wide flexibility of Ad vectors they are an ideal platform for expressing large amounts of antigen and/or polyvalent mosaic antigens [11,15]. These antigens are expressed as transgenes after cellular expression. Ad vectors that display antigens on their capsid surface can elicit a robust humoral immune response, this is known as the ‘‘antigen capsid-incorporation’’ strategy

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