Protective Vaccine-Induced CD4 + T Cell-Independent B Cell Responses against Rabies Infection

  • Dorfmeier C
  • Lytle A
  • Dunkel A
  • et al.
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Abstract

A major goal in rabies virus (RV) research is to develop a single-dose postexposure prophylaxis (PEP) that would simplify vaccination protocols, reduce costs associated with rabies prevention in humans, and save lives. Live replication-deficient RV-based vaccines are emerging as promising single-dose vaccines to replace currently licensed inactivated RV-based vaccines. Nonetheless, little is known about how effective B cells develop in response to live RV-based vaccination. Understanding this fundamental property of rabies immunology may help in developing a single-dose RV vaccine. Typically, vaccines induce B cells secreting high-affinity, class-switched antibodies during germinal center (GC) reactions; however, there is a lag time between vaccination and the generation of GC B cells. In this report, we show that RV-specific antibodies are detected in mice immunized with live but not inactivated RV-based vaccines before B cells displaying a GC B cell phenotype (B220 + GL7 hi CD95 hi ) are formed, indicating a potential role for T cell-independent and early extrafollicular T cell-dependent antibody responses in the protection against RV infection. Using two mouse models of CD4 + T cell deficiency, we show that B cells secreting virus-neutralizing antibodies (VNAs) are induced via T cell-independent mechanisms within 4 days postimmunization with a replication-deficient RV-based vaccine. Importantly, mice that are completely devoid of T cells (B6.129P2- Tcr β tm1Mom Tcr δ tm1Mom /J) show protection against pathogenic challenge shortly after immunization with a live replication-deficient RV-based vaccine. We show that vaccines that can exploit early pathways of B cell activation and development may hold the key for the development of a single-dose RV vaccine wherein the rapid induction of VNA is critical.

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APA

Dorfmeier, C. L., Lytle, A. G., Dunkel, A. L., Gatt, A., & McGettigan, J. P. (2012). Protective Vaccine-Induced CD4 + T Cell-Independent B Cell Responses against Rabies Infection. Journal of Virology, 86(21), 11533–11540. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.00615-12

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