A canarypox vector expressing cytomegalovirus (CMV) glycoprotein B primes for antibody responses to a live attenuated CMV vaccine (Towne).

Stuart P. Adler,Stanley A. Plotkin,Eva Gonczol, Michel Cadoz,Claude Meric, Jian Ben Wang, Pierre Dellamonica,Al M. Best, John Zahradnik,Steve Pincus, Klara Berencsi, William I. Cox, Zsofia Gyulai

Journal of Clinical Virology(1999)

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摘要
To develop a vaccine against cytomegalovirus (CMV), a canarypox virus (ALVAC) expressing CMV glycoprotein (gB) was evaluated alone or in combination with a live, attenuated CMV vaccine (Towne), Three doses of 10(6.5) TCID50 of ALVAC-CMV(gB) induced very low neutralizing or ELISA antibodies in most seronegative adults. However, to determine whether ALVAC-CMV(gB) could prime for antibody responses, 20 seronegative adults randomly received either 10(6.8) TCID50 of ALVAC-CMV(gB) or 10(6.8) TCID50 of ALVAC-RG, expressing the rabies glycoprotein, administered at 0 and 1 month, with all subjects receiving a dose of 10(3.5) pfu of the Towne vaccine at 90 days. For subjects primed with ALVAC-CMV(gB), neutralizing titers and ELISA antibodies to CMV(gB) developed sooner, were much higher, and persisted longer than for subjects primed with ALVAC-RG. All vaccines were well tolerated. These results demonstrate that ALVAC-CMV(gB) primes the immune system and suggest a combined-vaccine strategy to induce potentially protective levels of neutralizing antibodies.
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