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Title: Cotton rats previously immunized with a chimeric RSV FG glycoprotein develop enhanced pulmonary pathology when infected with RSV, a phenomenon not encountered following immunization with vaccinia--RSV recombinants or RSV. Author: Connors M, Collins PL, Firestone CY, Sotnikov AV, Waitze A, Davis AR, Hung PP, Chanock RM, Murphy BR. Journal: Vaccine; 1992; 10(7):475-84. PubMed ID: 1609551. Abstract: In studies conducted in the 1960s, children previously immunized with a formalin-inactivated respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine (FI-RSV) developed a greater incidence and severity of pulmonary disease during subsequent natural RSV infection than did controls. It was previously shown that cotton rats immunized with FI-RSV or immunoaffinity-purified fusion (F) glycoprotein developed enhanced pulmonary histopathology following intranasal challenge with RSV. In the present studies, various forms of immunization, including parenteral inoculation of an immunoaffinity-purified F glycoprotein or a chimeric FG glycoprotein produced in insect cells using a baculovirus vector (Bac-FG), intradermal infection with a vaccinia-F recombinant (Vac-F) or intranasal infection with an adenovirus-F recombinant (Ad-F) or RSV, were compared for immunogenicity, efficacy and ability to alter the host so that enhanced pulmonary histopathology developed during RSV infection 3 months after immunization. Immunization of cotton rats with F glycoprotein, Bac-FG, Vac-F, Ad-F or infection with RSV induced high levels of ELISA-F antibodies, but the antibodies induced by purified F glycoprotein of Bac-FG had low levels of neutralizing activity. Immunization with Vac-F or Ad-F, or infection with RSV induced a high level of resistance to pulmonary RSV replication, whereas animals immunized with Bac-FG or FI-RSV were only partially protected. Following RSV challenge, animals immunized with purified F glycoprotein or Bac-FG developed the highest levels of bronchiolar and alveolar histopathology, those immunized with FI-RSV had intermediate levels, and those immunized with Vac-F or RSV had histopathology scores at control levels. Ad-F immunized animals had elevated scores of bronchiolar but not alveolar histopathology; however, this finding was not reproducible. Passive transfer of pooled immune sera from animals infected with RSV or Vac-F and Vac-G was highly protective, whereas pooled sera from animals immunized with Bac-FG failed to protect the lungs against RSV challenge. Increased pulmonary histopathology was not observed in the passively immunized animals following RSV challenge, suggesting that the histopathology was mediated by RSV-specific T cells. These data indicate that subunit F glycoprotein or chimeric FG vaccines share with FI-RSV the properties of (i) induction of F antibodies with low neutralizing activity and (ii) enhancement of pulmonary histopathology during subsequent RSV infection. These observations confirm the need for caution in studies involving the administration of RSV subunit vaccines to seronegative humans.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]