Login / Signup

Immune Protection by a Cytomegalovirus Vaccine Vector Expressing a Single Low-Avidity Epitope.

Lisa BorknerKatarzyna M SitnikIryna DekhtiarenkoAnn-Kathrin PulmRonny TaoIngo DrexlerLuka Čičin Šain
Published in: Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950) (2017)
Experimental CMV-based vaccine vectors expressing a single MHC class I-restricted high-avidity epitope provided strong, T cell-dependent protection against viruses or tumors. In this study we tested the low-avidity epitope KCSRNRQYL, and show that a mouse CMV (MCMV) vector provides complete immune control of recombinant vaccinia virus expressing the same epitope if KCSRNRQYL is expressed within the immediate-early MCMV gene ie2 The same epitope expressed within the early M45 gene provided no protection, although MCMV vectors expressing the high-avidity epitope SSIEFARL induced protective immunity irrespective of gene expression context. Immune protection was matched by Ag-induced, long-term expansion of effector memory CD8 T cells, regardless of epitope avidity. We explained this pattern by observing regularities in Ag competition, where responses to high-avidity epitopes outcompeted weaker ones expressed later in the replicative cycle of the virus. Conversely, robust and early expression of a low-avidity epitope compensated its weak intrinsic antigenicity, resulting in strong and sustained immunity and immune protection.
Keyphrases
  • monoclonal antibody
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • quantum dots
  • poor prognosis
  • genome wide
  • diabetic rats
  • epstein barr virus
  • long non coding rna
  • drug induced
  • immune response
  • working memory
  • cell free