J Virol. 2012 May;86(9):5026-38
Gómez CE, Perdiguero B, Nájera JL, Sorzano CO, Jiménez V, González-Sanz R, Esteban M.
Poxviruses encode multiple inhibitors of the interferon (IFN) system,
acting at different levels and blocking the induction
of host defense mechanisms. Two viral gene
products, B19 and B8, have been shown to act as decoy receptors of type I
and type
II IFNs, blocking the binding of IFN to its
receptor. Since IFN plays a major role in innate immune responses, in
this investigation
we asked to what extent the viral inhibitors of the
IFN system impact the capacity of poxvirus vectors to activate immune
responses. This was tested in a mouse model with
single and double deletion mutants of the vaccine candidate NYVAC-C,
which
expresses the HIV-1 Env, Gag, Pol, and Nef
antigens.
When deleted individually or in double, the type I (B19) and
type II
(B8) IFN binding proteins were not required for
virus replication in cultured cells. Studies of immune responses in mice
after
DNA prime/NYVAC boost revealed that deletion of B8R and/or B19R genes improved the magnitude and quality of HIV-1-specific CD8+ T cell adaptive immune responses and impacted their memory phase, changing the contraction, the memory differentiation, the
effect magnitude, and the functionality profile. For B cell responses, deletion of the viral gene B8R and/or B19R had no effect on antibody levels to HIV-1 Env. These findings revealed that single or double deletion of viral factors (B8
and B19) targeting the IFN pathway is a useful approach in the design of improved poxvirus-based vaccines.