Epidermal injury and infection during poxvirus immunization is crucial for the generation of highly protective T cell-mediated immunity.

TitleEpidermal injury and infection during poxvirus immunization is crucial for the generation of highly protective T cell-mediated immunity.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2010
AuthorsLiu L, Zhong Q, Tian T, Dubin K, Athale SK, Kupper TS
JournalNat Med
Volume16
Issue2
Pagination224-7
Date Published2010 Feb
ISSN1546-170X
KeywordsAnimals, Immunity, Cellular, Mice, Poxviridae, T-Lymphocytes, Viral Vaccines
Abstract

Variola major (smallpox) infection claimed hundreds of millions lives before it was eradicated by a simple vaccination strategy: epicutaneous application of the related orthopoxvirus vaccinia virus (VACV) to superficially injured skin (skin scarification, s.s.). However, the remarkable success of this strategy was attributed to the immunogenicity of VACV rather than to the unique mode of vaccine delivery. We now show that VACV immunization via s.s., but not conventional injection routes, is essential for the generation of superior T cell-mediated immune responses that provide complete protection against subsequent challenges, independent of neutralizing antibodies. Skin-resident effector memory T cells (T(EM) cells) provide complete protection against cutaneous challenge, whereas protection against lethal respiratory challenge requires both respiratory mucosal T(EM) cells and central memory T cells (T(CM) cells). Vaccination with recombinant VACV (rVACV) expressing a tumor antigen was protective against tumor challenge only if delivered via the s.s. route; it was ineffective if delivered by hypodermic injection. The clinically safer nonreplicative modified vaccinia Ankara virus (MVA) also generated far superior protective immunity when delivered via the s.s. route compared to intramuscular (i.m.) injection as used in MVA clinical trials. Thus, delivery of rVACV-based vaccines, including MVA vaccines, through physically disrupted epidermis has clear-cut advantages over conventional vaccination via hypodermic injection.

DOI10.1038/nm.2078
Alternate JournalNat. Med.
PubMed ID20081864
PubMed Central IDPMC3070948
Grant ListR01 AI042124 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States
R37 AI025082 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States
U54 AI057159 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States
R01 AR065807 / AR / NIAMS NIH HHS / United States
U19 AI057330 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States
U19 AI057330-010003 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States
U19AI57330 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States
AI057159 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States