4.5 Article

Peptide-pulsed dendritic cells induce the hepatitis C viral epitope-specific responses of naive human T cells

Journal

VACCINE
Volume 32, Issue 26, Pages 3285-3292

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2014.03.083

Keywords

Dendritic cell; EpiMatrix; Epitope; HCV; Vaccine; T cell

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health Research Grant [U19 AI082642]

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Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major cause of liver disease. Spontaneous resolution of infection is associated with broad, MHC class I- (CD8(+)) and class II-restricted (CD4(+)) T cell responses to multiple viral epitopes. Only 20% of patients clear infection spontaneously, however, most develop chronic disease. The response to chemotherapy varies; therapeutic vaccination offers an additional treatment strategy. To date, therapeutic vaccines have demonstrated only limited success in clinical trials. Vector-mediated vaccination with multi-epitope-expressing DNA constructs provides an improved approach. Highly-conserved, HLA-A2-restricted HCV epitopes and HLA-DRB1-restricted immunogenic consensus sequences (ICS, each composed of multiple overlapping and highly conserved epitopes) were predicted using bioinformatics tools and synthesized as peptides. HLA binding activity was determined in competitive binding assays. Immunogenicity and the ability of each peptide to stimulate naive human T cell recognition and IFN-mu production were assessed in cultures of total PBMCs and in co-cultures composed of peptide-pulsed dendritic cells (DCs) and purified T lymphocytes, cell populations derived from normal blood donors. Essentially all predicted HLA-A2-restricted epitopes and HLA-DRB1-restricted ICS exhibited HLA binding activity and the ability to elicit immune recognition and IFN-lambda production by naive human T cells. The ability of DCs pulsed with these highly-conserved HLA-A2- and -DRB1-restricted peptides to induce naive human T cell reactivity and IFN gamma production ex vivo demonstrates the potential efficacy of a multi-epitope-based HCV vaccine targeted to dendritic cells. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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