Reference Database

YearReference
2023
Booster vaccination is required to elicit and maintain COVID-19 vaccine-induced immunity in SIV-infected macaques.
Li, Pingchao
Wang, Qian
He, Yizi
Yang, Chenchen
Zhang, Zhengyuan
Liu, Zijian
Liu, Bo
Yin, Li
Cui, Yilan
Hu, Peiyu
Liu, Yichu
Zheng, Pingqian
Wang, Wei
Qu, Linbing
Sun, Caijun
Guan, Suhua
Feng, Liqiang
Chen, Ling
Emerg Microbes Infect 2022 Dec;12(1): e2136538
Abstract

Prolonged infection and possible evolution of SARS-CoV-2 in patients living with uncontrolled HIV-1 infection highlight the importance of an effective vaccination regimen, yet the immunogenicity of COVID-19 vaccines and predictive immune biomarkers have not been well investigated. Herein, we report that the magnitude and persistence of antibody and cell-mediated immunity (CMI) elicited by an Ad5-vectored COVID-19 vaccine are impaired in SIV-infected macaques with high viral loads (> 10 genome copies per ml plasma, SIV) but not in macaques with low viral loads (< 10, SIV). After a second vaccination, the immune responses are robustly enhanced in all uninfected and SIV macaques. These responses also show a moderate increase in 70% SIV macaques but decline sharply soon after. Further analysis reveals that decreased antibody and CMI responses are associated with reduced circulating follicular helper T cell (TFH) counts and aberrant CD4/CD8 ratios, respectively, indicating that dysregulation of CD4 T cells by SIV infection impairs the COVID-19 vaccine-induced immunity. Ad5-vectored COVID-19 vaccine shows no impact on SIV loads or SIV-specific CMI responses. Our study underscores the necessity of frequent booster vaccinations in HIV-infected patients and provides indicative biomarkers for predicting vaccination effectiveness in these patients.

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