Author:
Saunders Kevin O.,Pardi Norbert,Parks Robert,Santra Sampa,Mu Zekun,Sutherland Laura,Scearce Richard,Barr Maggie,Eaton Amanda,Hernandez Giovanna,Goodman Derrick,Hogan Michael J.,Tombacz Istvan,Gordon David N.,Rountree R. Wes,Wang Yunfei,Lewis Mark G.,Pierson Theodore C.,Barbosa Chris,Tam Ying,Shen Xiaoying,Ferrari Guido,Tomaras Georgia D.,Montefiori David C.,Weissman Drew,Haynes Barton F.
Abstract
AbstractDevelopment of an effective AIDS vaccine remains a challenge. Nucleoside-modified mRNAs formulated in lipid nanoparticles (mRNA-LNP) have proved to be a potent mode of immunization against infectious diseases in preclinical studies, and are being tested for SARS-CoV-2 in humans. A critical question is how mRNA-LNP vaccine immunogenicity compares to that of traditional adjuvanted protein vaccines in primates. Here, we found that mRNA-LNP immunization compared to protein immunization elicited either the same or superior magnitude and breadth of HIV-1 Env-specific polyfunctional antibodies. Immunization with mRNA-LNP encoding Zika premembrane and envelope (prM-E) or HIV-1 Env gp160 induced durable neutralizing antibodies for at least 41 weeks. Doses of mRNA-LNP as low as 5 μg were immunogenic in macaques. Thus, mRNA-LNP can be used to rapidly generate single or multi-component vaccines, such as sequential vaccines needed to protect against HIV-1 infection. Such vaccines would be as or more immunogenic than adjuvanted recombinant protein vaccines in primates.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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