4.4 Article

Gene-gun DNA vaccination aggravates respiratory syncytial virus-induced pneumonitis

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENERAL VIROLOGY
Volume 85, Issue -, Pages 3017-3026

Publisher

MICROBIOLOGY SOC
DOI: 10.1099/vir.0.80098-0

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A CD8+ T-cell memory response to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) was generated by using a DNA vaccine construct encoding the dominant K-d-restricted epitope from the viral transcription anti-terminator protein M2 (M2(82-90)), linked covalently to human beta(2)-Microglobulin (beta(2)m). Cutaneous gene-gun immunization of BALB/c mice with this construct induced an antigen-specific CD8+ T-cell memory. After intranasal RSV challenge, accelerated CD8+ T-cell responses were observed in pulmonary lymph nodes and virus clearance from the lungs was enhanced. The construct induced weaker CD8+ T-cell responses than those elicited with recombinant vaccinia. virus expressing the complete RSV M2 protein, but stronger than those induced by a similar DNA construct without the beta(2)m gene. DNA vaccination led to enhanced pulmonary disease after RSV challenge, with increased weight loss and cell recruitment to the lung. Depletion of CD8+ T cells reduced, but did not abolish, enhancement of disease. Mice vaccinated with a construct encoding a class I-restricted lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus epitope and beta(2)m suffered more severe weight loss after RSV infection than unvaccinated RSV-infected mice, although RSV-specific CD8+ T-cell responses were not induced. Thus, in addition to specific CD8+ T cell-mediated immunopathology, gene-gun DNA vaccination causes non-specific enhancement of RSV disease without affecting virus clearance.

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