Evaluation of transduced dendritic cells expressing HIV-1 p24-Nef antigens in HIV-specific cytotoxic T cells induction as a therapeutic candidate vaccine.

2021 
Various approaches have been investigated to prevent or eliminate HIV-1 since 1981. However, the virus has been affecting human population worldwide with no effective vaccine yet. The conserved regions among the viral genes are suitable targets in mutable viruses to induce the immune responses via an effective delivery platform. In this study, we aimed at evaluation of p24 and nef in two forms of full and truncated genes as two fusion antigenic forms according to our previous bioinformatics analysis. The designed antigens were then transferred through ex vivo generated dendritic cells and also proteins in BALB/c to assess and compare immunogenicity. p24 and Nef amino acid sequences were aligned, then, the most conserved regions were selected and two fusion forms as the truncated (p24:80-231aa-Nef:120-150aa) and the full from (p24-Nef) were cloned and expressed in prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems. Lentiviral vectors were applied to generate recombinant virions harboring the genes of interest to transduce generated murine dendritic cells. BALB/c mice received the recombinant DCs or recombinant proteins according to the defined schedule. IgG development was assessed to determine humoral immune activity and cellular immune responses were evaluated by IL-5 and IFN-y induction. Granzyme B secretion was also investigated to determine CTL activity in different immunized groups. The data showed high induction of cellular immune responses in dendritic cell immunization specifically in immunized mice with the truncated form of the p24 and Nef by high secretion of IFN-y and strong CTL activity. Moreover, protein/ DC prime-boost formulation led to stronger Th1 pathway and strong CTL activation in comparison with other formulations. The generated recombinant dendritic cells expressing p24-Nef induced humoral and cellular immunity in a Th1 pathway specifically with the in silico predicted truncated antigen which could be of high value as a dendritic cell therapeutic vaccine candidate against HIV-1.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    53
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []