Improved Efficacy of a Tolerizing DNA Vaccine for Reversal of Hyperglycemia through Enhancement of Gene Expression and Localization to Intracellular Sites JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY Solvason, N., Lou, Y., Peters, W., Evans, E., Martinez, J., Ramirez, U., Ocampo, A., Yun, R., Ahmad, S., Liu, E., Yu, L., Eisenbarth, G., Leviten, M., Steinman, L., Garren, H. 2008; 181 (12): 8298-8307

Abstract

Insulin is a major target for the autoimmune-mediated destruction of pancreatic beta cells during the pathogenesis of type I diabetes. A plasmid DNA vaccine encoding mouse proinsulin II reduced the incidence of diabetes in a mouse model of type I diabetes when administered to hyperglycemic (therapeutic mode) or normoglycemic (prophylactic mode) NOD mice. Therapeutic administration of proinsulin DNA was accompanied by a rapid decrease in the number of insulin-specific IFN-gamma-producing T cells, whereas prophylactic treatment was accompanied by enhanced IFN-gamma-secreting cells and a decrease in insulin autoantibodies. Adoptive transfer experiments demonstrated that the protection was not mediated by induction of CD25(+)/CD4(+) T regulatory cells. The efficacy of the DNA vaccine was enhanced by increasing the level of expression of the encoded Ag, more frequent dosing, increasing dose level, and localization of the protein product to the intracellular compartment. The efficacy data presented in this study demonstrate that Ag-specific plasmid DNA therapy is a viable strategy for preventing progression of type I diabetes and defines critical parameters of the dosing regime that influences tolerance induction.

View details for Web of Science ID 000261583000016

View details for PubMedID 19050246