The acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) caused by HIV-1 is the leading cause of death in Africa and the fourth leading cause of death worldwide. This IPCAVD is developing HIV/AIDS vaccines that use DMA for priming and MVA for boosting (DNA/MVA vaccine) as well as a simpler and ultimately easier to deploy form of these vaccines, the use of MVA for both priming and boosting (MVA/MVA vaccine). Both the DMA and MVA vaccines use single vectors to express virus like particles (VLP). This IPCAVD seeks to build GM-CSF, an adjuvant, into these products for expression in cis. In preclinical studies, co-expression of GM-CSF has substantially enhanced protection. A central hypothesis for the IPCAVD is that GM-CSF improves protection by enhancing the mucosal presence of elicited T cell and Ab responses. Clade C HIV-1 which is endemic in southern Africa and parts of Asia accounts for about one half of the infections worldwide and >90% of the cases in India, a country with a rapidly spreading infection that has surpassed South Africa in its total number of cases. The vaccine development effort of this IPCAVD is focused on developing a clade C vaccine for India. This manufacturing project has five specific aims: ? Vaccine vector development. ? Assessment of vaccine vectors for suitability for manufacture. ? cGMP contract manufacture and toxicology testing of vaccine vectors. ? Regulatory support for an HVTN phase 1 trial. ? Development and conduct of release and stability assays. The project will be led by Dr. Mark Keister and co-directed by Dr. Harriet Robinson. Construction of the needed MVA vector will be by Dr. Bernard Moss under an Inter-Institutional Agreement for the development of DNA/MVA and MVA/MVA vaccines between GeoVax, Emory, CDC and the NIAID.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Research Program--Cooperative Agreements (U19)
Project #
1U19AI074073-01
Application #
7280621
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAI1-RB-A (J1))
Project Start
2007-03-01
Project End
2012-08-31
Budget Start
2007-09-30
Budget End
2008-08-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2007
Total Cost
$1,203,014
Indirect Cost
Name
Geovax, Inc.
Department
Type
DUNS #
148374205
City
Smyrna
State
GA
Country
United States
Zip Code
30080
Chamcha, Venkateswarlu; Kannanganat, Sunil; Gangadhara, Sailaja et al. (2016) Strong, but Age-Dependent, Protection Elicited by a Deoxyribonucleic Acid/Modified Vaccinia Ankara Simian Immunodeficiency Virus Vaccine. Open Forum Infect Dis 3:ofw034
Kannanganat, Sunil; Wyatt, Linda S; Gangadhara, Sailaja et al. (2016) High Doses of GM-CSF Inhibit Antibody Responses in Rectal Secretions and Diminish Modified Vaccinia Ankara/Simian Immunodeficiency Virus Vaccine Protection in TRIM5?-Restrictive Macaques. J Immunol 197:3586-3596
Kannanganant, Sunil; Gangadhara, Salaija; Lai, Lilin et al. (2014) Local control of repeated-dose rectal challenges in DNA/MVA-vaccinated macaques protected against a first series of simian immunodeficiency virus challenges. J Virol 88:5864-9
Robinson, Harriet L (2013) Non-neutralizing antibodies in prevention of HIV infection. Expert Opin Biol Ther 13:197-207
Nandakumar, Subhadra; Kannanganat, Sunil; Dobos, Karen M et al. (2013) O-mannosylation of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis adhesin Apa is crucial for T cell antigenicity during infection but is expendable for protection. PLoS Pathog 9:e1003705
Hellerstein, Michael; Xu, Yongxian; Marino, Tracie et al. (2012) Co-expression of HIV-1 virus-like particles and granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor by GEO-D03 DNA vaccine. Hum Vaccin Immunother 8:1654-8
Lai, Lilin; Kwa, Suefen; Kozlowski, Pamela A et al. (2011) Prevention of infection by a granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor co-expressing DNA/modified vaccinia Ankara simian immunodeficiency virus vaccine. J Infect Dis 204:164-73
Pillai, Vinod Bhaskara; Hellerstein, Michael; Yu, Tianwei et al. (2008) Comparative studies on in vitro expression and in vivo immunogenicity of supercoiled and open circular forms of plasmid DNA vaccines. Vaccine 26:1136-41