Title of article :
Co-administration and Evaluation of Immune Responses of Three DNA Vaccines Encoding Immunogenic Antigens from Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Author/Authors :
Peeridogaheh ، Hadi Department of Microbiology - School of Medicine - Ardabil University of Medical Sciences , Teimourpour ، Roghayeh Department of Microbiology - School of Medicine - Ardabil University of Medical Sciences , Habibzadeh ، Shahram Departments of Infectious Diseases - School of Medicine - Ardabil University of Medical Sciences , Mohammadshahi ، Jafar Departments of Infectious Diseases - School of Medicine - Ardabil University of Medical Sciences , Gholoobi ، Aida Department of Modern Sciences and Technologies - School of Medicine - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Teimourpour ، Amir Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics - School of Public Health - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Meshkat ، Zahra Antimicrobial Resistance Research Center - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences
From page :
1
To page :
6
Abstract :
Background: Ineffectiveness of BCG vaccine in controlling tuberculosis (TB) and co-infection of TB and HIV have turned TB into a serious global threat. Therefore, the development of an alternative vaccine to BCG and/or antimycobacterial drugs is an urgent need. Here, three chimeric DNA constructs consisting of Mtb32C-HBHA, Ag85a-Tb10.4, and Ag85a-cfp10 made in our previous studies were co-administered to BALB/c mice to evaluate their immune responses using a prime-boost regimen in which the animals were first immunized with BCG and then administered with DNA vaccines. Methods: In order to evaluate the immunogenicity of three DNA constructs, the levels of several immunomodulatory cytokines were measured in vaccinated mice. Thirty female BALB/c mice were divided into the following groups (n = 10): control (receiving pcDNA 3.1+ intramuscularly), vaccine (receiving recombinant vectors intramuscularly), and vaccine-BCG (receiving BCG subcuta- neously followed by recombinant vectors intramuscularly). Results: The levels of IL-4, IL-12, TGF-β, IFN-γ, and IL-10 were higher in the immunized groups than in the control group (P 0.05). Besides, the levels of IL-12 and IFN-γ were much higher in the BCG-vaccine group than in the vaccine alone group. In the case of IFN-γ, a significant difference was observed between the vaccine and BCG-vaccine groups at P 0.001 while in the case of IL-12, the difference was significant at P 0.05. However, in the case of IL-10, IL-4, and TGF-β, the differences between the vaccine and BCG- vaccine groups were not significant (P 0.05). Conclusions: Our results proved that using a chimeric DNA vaccine as a booster in the prime-boost strategy could significantly enhance the efficacy of BCG. This study suggests that the use of such DNA vaccines encoding mycobacterial immunogenic antigens as boosters enhances the efficacy of BCG.
Keywords :
BCG , BALB , c Mice , DNA , HIV , Vaccine
Journal title :
Archives of Clinical Infectious Diseases
Record number :
2503595
Link To Document :
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