Interleukin-15 response signature predicts RhCMV/SIV vaccine efficacy
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Published:2021-07-06
Issue:7
Volume:17
Page:e1009278
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ISSN:1553-7374
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Container-title:PLOS Pathogens
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language:en
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Short-container-title:PLoS Pathog
Author:
Barrenäs Fredrik, Hansen Scott G., Law Lynn, Driscoll Connor, Green Richard R., Smith Elise, Chang Jean, Golez InahORCID, Urion TarynORCID, Peng XinxiaORCID, Whitmore Leanne, Newhouse Daniel, Hughes Colette M., Morrow DavidORCID, Randall Kurt T., Selseth Andrea N.ORCID, Ford Julia C.ORCID, Gilbride Roxanne M., Randall Bryan E.ORCID, Ainslie EmilyORCID, Oswald Kelli, Shoemaker Rebecca, Fast Randy, Bosche William J.ORCID, Axthelm Michael K.ORCID, Fukazawa Yoshinori, Pavlakis George N.ORCID, Felber Barbara K., Fourati SlimORCID, Sekaly Rafick-Pierre, Lifson Jeffrey D., Komorowski JanORCID, Kosmider EwelinaORCID, Shao DanicaORCID, Song WenjunORCID, Edlefsen Paul T.ORCID, Picker Louis J., Gale MichaelORCID
Abstract
Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) challenge of rhesus macaques (RMs) vaccinated with strain 68–1 Rhesus Cytomegalovirus (RhCMV) vectors expressing SIV proteins (RhCMV/SIV) results in a binary outcome: stringent control and subsequent clearance of highly pathogenic SIV in ~55% of vaccinated RMs with no protection in the remaining 45%. Although previous work indicates that unconventionally restricted, SIV-specific, effector-memory (EM)-biased CD8+ T cell responses are necessary for efficacy, the magnitude of these responses does not predict efficacy, and the basis of protection vs. non-protection in 68–1 RhCMV/SIV vector-vaccinated RMs has not been elucidated. Here, we report that 68–1 RhCMV/SIV vector administration strikingly alters the whole blood transcriptome of vaccinated RMs, with the sustained induction of specific immune-related pathways, including immune cell, toll-like receptor (TLR), inflammasome/cell death, and interleukin-15 (IL-15) signaling, significantly correlating with subsequent vaccine efficacy. Treatment of a separate RM cohort with IL-15 confirmed the central involvement of this cytokine in the protection signature, linking the major innate and adaptive immune gene expression networks that correlate with RhCMV/SIV vaccine efficacy. This change-from-baseline IL-15 response signature was also demonstrated to significantly correlate with vaccine efficacy in an independent validation cohort of vaccinated and challenged RMs. The differential IL-15 gene set response to vaccination strongly correlated with the pre-vaccination activity of this pathway, with reduced baseline expression of IL-15 response genes significantly correlating with higher vaccine-induced induction of IL-15 signaling and subsequent vaccine protection, suggesting that a robust de novo vaccine-induced IL-15 signaling response is needed to program vaccine efficacy. Thus, the RhCMV/SIV vaccine imparts a coordinated and persistent induction of innate and adaptive immune pathways featuring IL-15, a known regulator of CD8+ T cell function, that support the ability of vaccine-elicited unconventionally restricted CD8+ T cells to mediate protection against SIV challenge.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
Virology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
20 articles.
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