Smallpox vaccine safety is dependent on T cells and not B cells

SN Gordon, V Cecchinato, V Andresen… - Journal of Infectious …, 2011 - academic.oup.com
SN Gordon, V Cecchinato, V Andresen, JM Heraud, A Hryniewicz, RW Parks, D Venzon…
Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2011academic.oup.com
Abstract (See the editorial commentary by Bray, on pages 1037–9.) The licensed smallpox
vaccine, ACAM2000, is a cell culture derivative of Dryvax. Both ACAM2000 and Dryvax are
administered by skin scarification and can cause progressive vaccinia, with skin lesions that
disseminate to distal sites. We have investigated the immunologic basis of the containment
of vaccinia in the skin with the goal to identify safer vaccines for smallpox. Macaques were
depleted systemically of T or B cells and vaccinated with either Dryvax or an attenuated …
Abstract
(See the editorial commentary by Bray, on pages 1037–9.)
The licensed smallpox vaccine, ACAM2000, is a cell culture derivative of Dryvax. Both ACAM2000 and Dryvax are administered by skin scarification and can cause progressive vaccinia, with skin lesions that disseminate to distal sites. We have investigated the immunologic basis of the containment of vaccinia in the skin with the goal to identify safer vaccines for smallpox. Macaques were depleted systemically of T or B cells and vaccinated with either Dryvax or an attenuated vaccinia vaccine, LC16m8. B cell depletion did not affect the size of skin lesions induced by either vaccine. However, while depletion of both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells had no adverse effects on LC16m8-vaccinated animals, it caused progressive vaccinia in macaques immunized with Dryvax. As both Dryvax and LC16m8 vaccines protect healthy macaques from a lethal monkeypox intravenous challenge, our data identify LC16m8 as a safer and effective alternative to ACAM2000 and Dryvax vaccines for immunocompromised individuals.
Oxford University Press