Protective efficacy of a broadly cross-reactive swine influenza DNA vaccine encoding M2e, cytotoxic T lymphocyte epitope and consensus H3 hemagglutinin.
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Pigs have been implicated as mixing reservoir for the generation of new pandemic influenza strains, control of swine influenza
has both veterinary and public health significance. Unlike human influenza vaccines, strains used for commercially available
swine influenza vaccines are not regularly replaced, making the vaccines provide limited protection against antigenically
diverse viruses. It is therefore necessary to develop broadly protective swine influenza vaccines that are efficacious to
both homologous and heterologous virus infections. In this study, two forms of DNA vaccines were constructed, one was made
by fusing M2e to consensus H3HA (MHa), which represents the majority of the HA sequences of H3N2 swine influenza viruses.
Another was made by fusing M2e and a conserved CTL epitope (NP147-155) to consensus H3HA (MNHa). Their protective efficacies
against homologous and heterologous challenges were tested.
RESULTS
BALB/c mice were immunized twice by particle-mediated epidermal delivery (gene gun) with the two DNA vaccines. It was shown
that the two vaccines elicited substantial antibody responses, and MNHa induced more significant T cell-mediated immune response
than MHa did. Then two H3N2 strains representative of different evolutional and antigenic clusters were used to challenge
the vaccine-immunized mice (homosubtypic challenge). Results indicated that both of the DNA vaccines prevented homosubtypic
virus infections completely. The vaccines' heterologous protective efficacies were further tested by challenging with a H1N1
swine influenza virus and a reassortant 2009 pandemic strain. It was found that MNHa reduced the lung viral titers significantly
in both challenge groups, histopathological observation showed obvious reduction of lung pathogenesis as compared to MHa and
control groups.
CONCLUSIONS
The combined utility of the consensus HA and the conserved M2e and CTL epitope can confer complete and partial protection
against homologous and heterologous challenges, respectively, in mouse model. This may provide a basis for the development
of universal swine influenza vaccines.
Links
Authors
Wang B, Yu H, Yang FR, Huang M, Ma JH, Tong GZ
Institution
Division of Swine Infectious Diseases, Shanghai Veterinary Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Shanghai 200241, China.
Source
Virology journal 9: 2012 pg 127MeSH
AnimalsDisease Models, Animal
Epitopes
Hemagglutinin Glycoproteins, Influenza Virus
Influenza A Virus, H3N2 Subtype
Influenza Vaccines
Lung
Mice
Mice, Inbred BALB C
Orthomyxoviridae Infections
Swine
Swine Diseases
T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic
Vaccines, DNA
Viral Load
Viral Matrix Proteins
Pub Type(s)
Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Language
eng
PubMed ID
22738661
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