A renewed attack on HIV
Novel safe and effective vaccines to induce protective immune responses against HIV in humans are in the pipeline thanks to EU research.
The 'A novel non-integrating replication limited lentiviral-based vector
for HIV vaccination' (HIVNONILV) project has started work on the
development of a novel lentivirus vector that is non-integrating
(NONI-LV) and replication-limited. This strategy improves the safety of
using DNA vaccines as both features carry inherent risks including
mutagenesis after insertion in the host genome.
Project members' previous research revealed that these vectors will
induce protective immune responses against challenge viruses. These
challenge viruses, based on the monkey equivalent of HIV, simian
immunodeficiency virus (SIV), are notoriously hard to control by
vaccination. HIVNONILV researchers are evaluating the safety,
immunogenicity, and efficacy of their novel NONI-LV vector against
pathogenic viruses in the macaque model of HIV vaccine.
Results so far demonstrate that a single dose delivery of the DNA
vaccine promoted generation of vaccine-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells.
Importantly, these have immediate and recallable immune activity even in
the absence of persistent antigen stimulation. So far, this has only
been achieved using replication competent and persistent recombinant HIV
viral vectors.
The work of the HIVNONILV project has important ramifications.
Probably the most significant of these is that the DNA vaccine produces
particles limited to a single cycle of infection.
published: 2015-01-29