4.5 Article

An adjuvanted respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein induces protection in aged BALB/c mice

Journal

IMMUNITY & AGEING
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/1742-4933-9-21

Keywords

Respiratory Syncytial Virus; Immunosenescence; Alum; Adjuvant; Aged mice

Funding

  1. MedImmune, LLC
  2. NIH [1R01AI087798, 1U19AI095227]
  3. Emory Egleston Children Research Center (EECRC)
  4. American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR)

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Background: Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) causes significant disease in the elderly, in part, because immunosenescence impairs protective immune responses to infection in this population. Despite previous and current efforts, there is no RSV vaccine currently licensed in infants or elderly adults. Adjuvanted RSV subunit vaccines have the potential to boost waning immune responses and reduce the burden of RSV disease in the elderly population. Results: We used an aged BALB/c mouse model to evaluate immune responses to RSV Fusion (F) protein in the absence and presence of an alum adjuvant. We demonstrate that aged BALB/c mice immunized with alum-adjuvanted RSV F protein had significantly reduced lung viral titers at day 4 following challenge with wild-type (wt) RSV. Serum neutralizing antibody titers measured on day 27 correlated with protection in both young and aged vaccinated mice, although the magnitude of antibody titers was lower in aged mice. Unlike young mice, in aged mice, alum-adjuvanted RSV F did not induce lung T(H)2-type cytokines or eosinophil infiltration compared to non-adjuvanted F protein following wt RSV challenge. Conclusion: Our studies demonstrate that neutralizing anti-RSV antibody titers correlate with protection in both young and aged BALB/c mice vaccinated with RSV F protein vaccines. The F + alum formulation mediated greater protection compared to the non-adjuvanted F protein in both young and aged mice. However, while alum can boost F-specific antibody responses in aged mice, it does not completely overcome the reduced ability of a senescent immune system to respond to the RSV F antigen. Thus, our data suggest that a stronger adjuvant may be required for the prevention of RSV disease in immunosenescent populations, to achieve the appropriate balance of protective neutralizing antibodies and effective T(H)1-type cytokine response along with minimal lung immunopathology.

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