Evaluation of the Effect of CD70 Co-Expression on CD8 T Cell Response in Protein-Prime MVA-Boost Vaccination in Mice

Author:

Stephan Ann-Sophie1,Kosinska Anna12,Mück-Häusl Martin1,Muschaweckh Andreas3ORCID,Jäger Clemens1,Röder Natalie1,Heikenwälder Mathias14,Dembek Claudia12,Protzer Ulrike12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Virology, Technical University of Munich, Helmholtz Zentrum München, 81675 Munich, Germany

2. German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), Partner Site Munich, 81675 Munich, Germany

3. Institute for Experimental Neuroimmunology, Technical University of Munich School of Medicine, 81675 Munich, Germany

4. Division of Chronic Inflammation and Cancer, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) Heidelberg, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany

Abstract

Here, we investigate the potential of CD70 co-expression during viral vector boost vaccination to improve an antigen-specific T cell response. To determine the chance of activating antigen-specific T cells by CD70, we used the HBV core antigen as a model antigen in a heterologous protein-prime, Modified Vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) boost vaccination scheme. Both the HBV core and a CD70 expression cassette were co-expressed upon delivery by an MVA vector under the same promoter linked by a P2A site. To compare immunogenicity with and without CD70 co-expression, HBV-naïve, C57BL/6 (wt) mice and HBV-transgenic mice were prime-vaccinated using recombinant HBV core antigen followed by the MVA vector boost. Co-expression of CD70 increased the number of vaccine-induced HBV core-specific CD8 T cells by >2-fold and improved their effector functions in HBV-naïve mice. In vaccinated HBV1.3tg mice, the number and functionality of HBV core-specific CD8 T cells was slightly increased upon CD70 co-expression in low-viremic, but not in high-viremic animals. CD70 co-expression did not impact liver damage as indicated by ALT levels in the serum, but increased the number of vaccine-induced, proliferative T cell clusters in the liver. Overall, this study indicates that orchestrated co-expression of CD70 and a vaccine antigen may be an interesting and safe means of enhancing antigen-specific CD8 T cell responses using vector-based vaccines, although in our study it was not sufficient to break immune tolerance.

Funder

German Center of Infection Research (DZIF) and the Promotionsprogramm „Translationale Medizin“ of the School of Medicine, Technical University of Munich

European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program

BMBF via project TherVacB Plus

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Drug Discovery,Pharmacology,Immunology

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