Key Points
We evaluated four heterologous prime-boost HIV vaccine strategies in a clinical trial.
Three strategies, all including the HIV MVA-B vaccine, led to T cell responses.
A gene expression signature related to the HIV MVA-B vaccine was identified.
Abstract
Heterologous prime-boost strategies are of interest for HIV vaccine development. The order of prime-boost components could be important for the induction of T cell responses. In this phase I/II multi-arm trial, three vaccine candidates were used as prime or boost: modified vaccinia Ankara (MVA) HIV-B (coding for Gag, Pol, Nef); HIV LIPO-5 (five lipopeptides from Gag, Pol, Nef); DNA GTU-MultiHIV B (coding for Rev, Nef, Tat, Gag, Env gp160 clade B). Healthy human volunteers (n = 92) were randomized to four groups: 1) MVA at weeks 0/8 + LIPO-5 at weeks 20/28 (M/L); 2) LIPO-5 at weeks 0/8 + MVA at weeks 20/28 (L/M); 3) DNA at weeks 0/4/12 + LIPO-5 at weeks 20/28 (G/L); 4) DNA at weeks 0/4/12 + MVA at weeks 20/28 (G/M). The frequency of IFN-γ–ELISPOT responders at week 30 was 33, 43, 0, and 74%, respectively. Only MVA-receiving groups were further analyzed (n = 62). Frequency of HIV-specific cytokine-positive (IFN-γ, IL-2, or TNF-α) CD4+ T cells increased significantly from week 0 to week 30 (median change of 0.06, 0.11, and 0.10% for M/L, L/M, and G/M, respectively), mainly after MVA vaccinations, and was sustained until week 52. HIV-specific CD8+ T cell responses increased significantly at week 30 in M/L and G/M (median change of 0.02 and 0.05%). Significant whole-blood gene expression changes were observed 2 wk after the first MVA injection, regardless of its use as prime or boost. An MVA gene signature was identified, including 86 genes mainly related to cell cycle pathways. Three prime-boost strategies led to CD4+ and CD8+ T cell responses and to a whole-blood gene expression signature primarily due to their MVA HIV-B component.
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Footnotes
↵2 All authors and their affiliations appear at the end of this article.
This work was supported by the Investissements d’Avenir program managed by the ANR under reference ANR-10-LABX-77-01. This clinical trial was sponsored by INSERM-ANRS and funded by the ANRS and VRI. FIT Biotech provided the GTU-MultiHIV B vaccine.
Conceptualization, L.R., J.-D.L., R.T., and Y.L.; data curation, C. Lacabaratz, L.H., A.W., H.H., A.D., C.B., E.R., and M.D.; formal analysis, L.R., C.B., M.D., B.H., and R.T.; funding acquisition, Y.L.; investigation, J.-D.L., O.L., F.L., I.P.-M., C. Lacabaratz, A.W., H.H., A.D., M.S., C. Lefebvre, E.F., P.T., and L.G.; methodology, L.R. and R.T.; project administration, L.R., J.-D.L., L.H., V.R., and Y.L.; resources: software, B.H.; supervision, L.R., J.-D.L., R.T., and Y.L.; validation: C. Lacabaratz, L.H., A.W., H.H., and E.R.; visualization, C.B. and M.D.; writing – original draft, L.R. and Y.L.; writing – review and editing, all authors.
The microarray data have been submitted to Gene Expression Omnibus under accession number GSE196172.
The online version of this article contains supplemental material.
Abbreviations used in this article:
- ANRS
- French National Agency for Aids and Viral Hepatitis Research
- FDR
- false discovery rate
- ICS
- intracellular cytokine staining
- mITT
- modified intention-to-treat
- MVA
- modified vaccinia Ankara
- SAE
- serious adverse event
- SFU
- spot forming unit
- Received November 17, 2021.
- Accepted April 3, 2022.
- Copyright © 2022 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.
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