A Recombinant MVA-Based RSV Vaccine Induces T-Cell and Antibody Responses That Cooperate in the Protection Against RSV Infection

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY(2022)

Cited 10|Views18
No score
Abstract
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) causes a respiratory disease with a potentially fatal outcome especially in infants and elderly individuals. Several vaccines failed in pivotal clinical trials, and to date, no vaccine against RSV has been licensed. We have developed an RSV vaccine based on the recombinant Modified Vaccinia Virus Ankara-BN (R) (MVA-RSV), containing five RSV-specific antigens that induced antibody and T-cell responses, which is currently tested in clinical trials. Here, the immunological mechanisms of protection were evaluated to determine viral loads in lungs upon vaccination of mice with MVA-RSV followed by intranasal RSV challenge. Depletion of CD4 or CD8 T cells, serum transfer, and the use of genetically engineered mice lacking the ability to generate either RSV-specific antibodies (T11 mu MT), the IgA isotype (IgA knockout), or CD8 T cells (beta 2M knockout) revealed that complete protection from RSV challenge is dependent on CD4 and CD8 T cells as well as antibodies, including IgA. Thus, MVA-RSV vaccination optimally protects against RSV infection by employing multiple arms of the adaptive immune system.
More
Translated text
Key words
MVA, vaccines, RSV, protection, mode of action
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined