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Dive into the research topics where Christopher J. A. Duncan is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher J. A. Duncan.


Nature Communications | 2013

Protective CD8 + T-cell immunity to human malaria induced by chimpanzee adenovirus-MVA immunisation

Katie Ewer; Geraldine A. O'Hara; Christopher J. A. Duncan; Katharine A. Collins; Susanne H. Sheehy; Arturo Reyes-Sandoval; Anna L. Goodman; Nick J. Edwards; Sean C. Elias; Fenella D. Halstead; Rhea J. Longley; Rosalind Rowland; Ian D. Poulton; Simon J. Draper; Andrew M. Blagborough; Eleanor Berrie; Sarah Moyle; Nicola Williams; Loredana Siani; Antonella Folgori; Stefano Colloca; Robert E. Sinden; Alison M. Lawrie; Riccardo Cortese; Sarah C. Gilbert; Alfredo Nicosia; Adrian V. S. Hill

Induction of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells offers the prospect of immunization against many infectious diseases, but no subunit vaccine has induced CD8+ T cells that correlate with efficacy in humans. Here we demonstrate that a replication-deficient chimpanzee adenovirus vector followed by a modified vaccinia virus Ankara booster induces exceptionally high frequency T-cell responses (median >2400 SFC/106 peripheral blood mononuclear cells) to the liver-stage Plasmodium falciparum malaria antigen ME-TRAP. It induces sterile protective efficacy against heterologous strain sporozoites in three vaccinees (3/14, 21%), and delays time to patency through substantial reduction of liver-stage parasite burden in five more (5/14, 36%), P=0.008 compared with controls. The frequency of monofunctional interferon-γ-producing CD8+ T cells, but not antibodies, correlates with sterile protection and delay in time to patency (Pcorrected=0.005). Vaccine-induced CD8+ T cells provide protection against human malaria, suggesting that a major limitation of previous vaccination approaches has been the insufficient magnitude of induced T cells.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2012

Preliminary Assessment of the Efficacy of a T-Cell–Based Influenza Vaccine, MVA-NP+M1, in Humans

Patrick J. Lillie; Tamara Berthoud; Timothy J. Powell; Teresa Lambe; Caitlin E. Mullarkey; Alexandra J. Spencer; Matthew Hamill; Yanchun Peng; Marie Eve Blais; Christopher J. A. Duncan; Susanne H. Sheehy; Tom Havelock; Saul N. Faust; Rob Lambkin Williams; Anthony Gilbert; John Oxford; Tao Dong; Adrian V. S. Hill; Sarah C. Gilbert

A single vaccination with MVA-NP+M1 boosts T-cell responses to conserved influenza antigens in humans. Protection against influenza disease and virus shedding was demonstrated in an influenza virus challenge study.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2012

Clinical Assessment of a Recombinant Simian Adenovirus ChAd63: A Potent New Vaccine Vector

Geraldine A. O'Hara; Christopher J. A. Duncan; Katie Ewer; Katharine A. Collins; Sean C. Elias; Fenella D. Halstead; Anna L. Goodman; Nick J. Edwards; Arturo Reyes-Sandoval; Prudence Bird; Rosalind Rowland; Susanne H. Sheehy; Ian D. Poulton; Claire Hutchings; Stephen Todryk; Laura Andrews; Antonella Folgori; Eleanor Berrie; Sarah Moyle; Alfredo Nicosia; Stefano Colloca; Riccardo Cortese; Loredana Siani; Alison M. Lawrie; Sarah C. Gilbert; Adrian V. S. Hill

Background. Vaccine development in human Plasmodium falciparum malaria has been hampered by the exceptionally high levels of CD8+ T cells required for efficacy. Use of potently immunogenic human adenoviruses as vaccine vectors could overcome this problem, but these are limited by preexisting immunity to human adenoviruses. Methods. From 2007 to 2010, we undertook a phase I dose and route finding study of a new malaria vaccine, a replication-incompetent chimpanzee adenovirus 63 (ChAd63) encoding the preerythrocytic insert multiple epitope thrombospondin-related adhesion protein (ME-TRAP; n = 54 vaccinees) administered alone (n = 28) or with a modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) ME-TRAP booster immunization 8 weeks later (n = 26). We observed an excellent safety profile. High levels of TRAP antigen–specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells, as detected by interferon γ enzyme-linked immunospot assay and flow cytometry, were induced by intramuscular ChAd63 ME-TRAP immunization at doses of 5 × 1010 viral particles and above. Subsequent administration of MVA ME-TRAP boosted responses to exceptionally high levels, and responses were maintained for up to 30 months postvaccination. Conclusions. The ChAd63 chimpanzee adenovirus vector appears safe and highly immunogenic, providing a viable alternative to human adenoviruses as vaccine vectors for human use. Clinical Trials Registration. NCT00890019.


Molecular Therapy | 2012

ChAd63-MVA-vectored blood-stage malaria vaccines targeting MSP1 and AMA1: assessment of efficacy against mosquito bite challenge in humans

Susanne H. Sheehy; Christopher J. A. Duncan; Sean C. Elias; Prateek Choudhary; Sumi Biswas; Fenella D. Halstead; Katharine A. Collins; Nick J. Edwards; Alexander D. Douglas; Nicholas A. Anagnostou; Katie Ewer; Tom Havelock; Tabitha Mahungu; Carly M. Bliss; Kazutoyo Miura; Ian D. Poulton; Patrick J. Lillie; Richard D. Antrobus; Eleanor Berrie; Sarah Moyle; Katherine Gantlett; Stefano Colloca; Riccardo Cortese; Carole A. Long; Robert E. Sinden; Sarah C. Gilbert; Alison M. Lawrie; Tom Doherty; Saul N. Faust; Alfredo Nicosia

The induction of cellular immunity, in conjunction with antibodies, may be essential for vaccines to protect against blood-stage infection with the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. We have shown that prime-boost delivery of P. falciparum blood-stage antigens by chimpanzee adenovirus 63 (ChAd63) followed by the attenuated orthopoxvirus MVA is safe and immunogenic in healthy adults. Here, we report on vaccine efficacy against controlled human malaria infection delivered by mosquito bites. The blood-stage malaria vaccines were administered alone, or together (MSP1+AMA1), or with a pre-erythrocytic malaria vaccine candidate (MSP1+ME-TRAP). In this first human use of coadministered ChAd63-MVA regimes, we demonstrate immune interference whereby responses against merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP1) are dominant over apical membrane antigen 1 (AMA1) and ME-TRAP. We also show that induction of strong cellular immunity against MSP1 and AMA1 is safe, but does not impact on parasite growth rates in the blood. In a subset of vaccinated volunteers, a delay in time to diagnosis was observed and sterilizing protection was observed in one volunteer coimmunized with MSP1+AMA1-results consistent with vaccine-induced pre-erythrocytic, rather than blood-stage, immunity. These data call into question the utility of T cell-inducing blood-stage malaria vaccines and suggest that the focus should remain on high-titer antibody induction against susceptible antigen targets.


Molecular Therapy | 2011

Phase Ia clinical evaluation of the Plasmodium falciparum blood-stage antigen MSP1 in ChAd63 and MVA vaccine vectors.

Susanne H. Sheehy; Christopher J. A. Duncan; Sean C. Elias; Katharine A. Collins; Katie Ewer; Alexandra J. Spencer; Andrew R. Williams; Fenella D. Halstead; Samuel E. Moretz; Kazutoyo Miura; Christian Epp; Matthew D. J. Dicks; Ian D. Poulton; Alison M. Lawrie; Eleanor Berrie; Sarah Moyle; Carole A. Long; Stefano Colloca; Riccardo Cortese; Sarah C. Gilbert; Alfredo Nicosia; Adrian V. S. Hill; Simon J. Draper

Efficacy trials of antibody-inducing protein-in-adjuvant vaccines targeting the blood-stage Plasmodium falciparum malaria parasite have so far shown disappointing results. The induction of cell-mediated responses in conjunction with antibody responses is thought to be one alternative strategy that could achieve protective efficacy in humans. Here, we prepared chimpanzee adenovirus 63 (ChAd63) and modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) replication-deficient vectors encoding the well-studied P. falciparum blood-stage malaria antigen merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP1). A phase Ia clinical trial was conducted in healthy adults of a ChAd63-MVA MSP1 heterologous prime-boost immunization regime. The vaccine was safe and generally well tolerated. Fewer systemic adverse events (AEs) were observed following ChAd63 MSP1 than MVA MSP1 administration. Exceptionally strong T-cell responses were induced, and these displayed a mixed of CD4(+) and CD8(+) phenotype. Substantial MSP1-specific serum immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody responses were also induced, which were capable of recognizing native parasite antigen, but these did not reach titers sufficient to neutralize P. falciparum parasites in vitro. This viral vectored vaccine regime is thus a leading approach for the induction of strong cellular and humoral immunogenicity against difficult disease targets in humans. Further studies are required to assess whether this strategy can achieve protective efficacy against blood-stage malaria infection.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Phase Ia clinical evaluation of the safety and immunogenicity of the Plasmodium falciparum blood-stage antigen AMA1 in ChAd63 and MVA vaccine vectors.

Susanne H. Sheehy; Christopher J. A. Duncan; Sean C. Elias; Sumi Biswas; Katharine A. Collins; Geraldine A. O'Hara; Fenella D. Halstead; Katie Ewer; Tabitha Mahungu; Alexandra J. Spencer; Kazutoyo Miura; Ian D. Poulton; Matthew D. J. Dicks; Nick J. Edwards; Eleanor Berrie; Sarah Moyle; Stefano Colloca; Riccardo Cortese; Katherine Gantlett; Carole A. Long; Alison M. Lawrie; Sarah C. Gilbert; Tom Doherty; Alfredo Nicosia; Adrian V. S. Hill; Simon J. Draper

Background Traditionally, vaccine development against the blood-stage of Plasmodium falciparum infection has focused on recombinant protein-adjuvant formulations in order to induce high-titer growth-inhibitory antibody responses. However, to date no such vaccine encoding a blood-stage antigen(s) alone has induced significant protective efficacy against erythrocytic-stage infection in a pre-specified primary endpoint of a Phase IIa/b clinical trial designed to assess vaccine efficacy. Cell-mediated responses, acting in conjunction with functional antibodies, may be necessary for immunity against blood-stage P. falciparum. The development of a vaccine that could induce both cell-mediated and humoral immune responses would enable important proof-of-concept efficacy studies to be undertaken to address this question. Methodology We conducted a Phase Ia, non-randomized clinical trial in 16 healthy, malaria-naïve adults of the chimpanzee adenovirus 63 (ChAd63) and modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) replication-deficient viral vectored vaccines encoding two alleles (3D7 and FVO) of the P. falciparum blood-stage malaria antigen; apical membrane antigen 1 (AMA1). ChAd63-MVA AMA1 administered in a heterologous prime-boost regime was shown to be safe and immunogenic, inducing high-level T cell responses to both alleles 3D7 (median 2036 SFU/million PBMC) and FVO (median 1539 SFU/million PBMC), with a mixed CD4+/CD8+ phenotype, as well as substantial AMA1-specific serum IgG responses (medians of 49 µg/mL and 41 µg/mL for 3D7 and FVO AMA1 respectively) that demonstrated growth inhibitory activity in vitro. Conclusions ChAd63-MVA is a safe and highly immunogenic delivery platform for both alleles of the AMA1 antigen in humans which warrants further efficacy testing. ChAd63-MVA is a promising heterologous prime-boost vaccine strategy that could be applied to numerous other diseases where strong cellular and humoral immune responses are required for protection. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01095055


PLOS ONE | 2011

Impact on Malaria Parasite Multiplication Rates in Infected Volunteers of the Protein-in-Adjuvant Vaccine AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+CPG 7909

Christopher J. A. Duncan; Susanne H. Sheehy; Katie Ewer; Alexander D. Douglas; Katharine A. Collins; Fenella D. Halstead; Sean C. Elias; Patrick J. Lillie; Kelly M. Rausch; Joan Aebig; Kazutoyo Miura; Nick J. Edwards; Ian D. Poulton; Angela Hunt-Cooke; David Porter; Fiona M. Thompson; Ros Rowland; Simon J. Draper; Sarah C. Gilbert; Michael P. Fay; Carole A. Long; Daming Zhu; Yimin Wu; Laura B. Martin; Charles Anderson; Alison M. Lawrie; Adrian V. S. Hill; Ruth D. Ellis

Background Inhibition of parasite growth is a major objective of blood-stage malaria vaccines. The in vitro assay of parasite growth inhibitory activity (GIA) is widely used as a surrogate marker for malaria vaccine efficacy in the down-selection of candidate blood-stage vaccines. Here we report the first study to examine the relationship between in vivo Plasmodium falciparum growth rates and in vitro GIA in humans experimentally infected with blood-stage malaria. Methods In this phase I/IIa open-label clinical trial five healthy malaria-naive volunteers were immunised with AMA1/C1-Alhydrogel+CPG 7909, and together with three unvaccinated controls were challenged by intravenous inoculation of P. falciparum infected erythrocytes. Results A significant correlation was observed between parasite multiplication rate in 48 hours (PMR) and both vaccine-induced growth-inhibitory activity (Pearson r = −0.93 [95% CI: −1.0, −0.27] P = 0.02) and AMA1 antibody titres in the vaccine group (Pearson r = −0.93 [95% CI: −0.99, −0.25] P = 0.02). However immunisation failed to reduce overall mean PMR in the vaccine group in comparison to the controls (vaccinee 16 fold [95% CI: 12, 22], control 17 fold [CI: 0, 65] P = 0.70). Therefore no impact on pre-patent period was observed (vaccine group median 8.5 days [range 7.5–9], control group median 9 days [range 7–9]). Conclusions Despite the first observation in human experimental malaria infection of a significant association between vaccine-induced in vitro growth inhibitory activity and in vivo parasite multiplication rate, this did not translate into any observable clinically relevant vaccine effect in this small group of volunteers. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov [NCT00984763]


Journal of Virology | 2014

High multiplicity HIV-1 infection and neutralizing antibody evasion mediated by the macrophage-T cell virological synapse

Christopher J. A. Duncan; James Williams; Torben Schiffner; Kathleen Gärtner; Christina Ochsenbauer; John C. Kappes; Rebecca A. Russell; John Frater; Quentin J. Sattentau

ABSTRACT Macrophage infection is considered to play an important role in HIV-1 pathogenesis and persistence. Using a primary cell-based coculture model, we show that monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) efficiently transmit a high-multiplicity HIV-1 infection to autologous CD4+ T cells through a viral envelope glycoprotein (Env) receptor- and actin-dependent virological synapse (VS), facilitated by interactions between ICAM-1 and LFA-1. Virological synapse (VS)-mediated transmission by MDM results in high levels of T cell HIV-1 integration and is 1 to 2 orders of magnitude more efficient than cell-free infection. This mode of cell-to-cell transmission is broadly susceptible to the activity of CD4 binding site (CD4bs) and glycan or glycopeptide epitope-specific broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (bNMAbs) but shows resistance to bNMAbs targeting the Env gp41 subunit membrane-proximal external region (MPER). These data define for the first time the structure and function of the macrophage-to-T cell VS and have important implications for bNMAb activity in HIV-1 prophylaxis and therapy. IMPORTANCE The ability of HIV-1 to move directly between contacting immune cells allows efficient viral dissemination with the potential to evade antibody attack. Here, we show that HIV-1 spreads from infected macrophages to T cells via a structure called a virological synapse that maintains extended contact between the two cell types, allowing transfer of multiple infectious events to the T cell. This process allows the virus to avoid neutralization by a class of antibody targeting the gp41 subunit of the envelope glycoproteins. These results have implications for viral spread in vivo and the specificities of neutralizing antibody elicited by antibody-based vaccines.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2014

Macrophage Infection via Selective Capture of HIV-1-Infected CD4+ T Cells

Amy E. Baxter; Rebecca A. Russell; Christopher J. A. Duncan; Michael D. Moore; Christian B. Willberg; José L. Pablos; Andrés Finzi; Daniel E. Kaufmann; Christina Ochsenbauer; John C. Kappes; Fedde Groot; Quentin J. Sattentau

Summary Macrophages contribute to HIV-1 pathogenesis by forming a viral reservoir and mediating neurological disorders. Cell-free HIV-1 infection of macrophages is inefficient, in part due to low plasma membrane expression of viral entry receptors. We find that macrophages selectively capture and engulf HIV-1-infected CD4+ T cells leading to efficient macrophage infection. Infected T cells, both healthy and dead or dying, were taken up through viral envelope glycoprotein-receptor-independent interactions, implying a mechanism distinct from conventional virological synapse formation. Macrophages infected by this cell-to-cell route were highly permissive for both CCR5-using macrophage-tropic and otherwise weakly macrophage-tropic transmitted/founder viruses but restrictive for nonmacrophage-tropic CXCR4-using virus. These results have implications for establishment of the macrophage reservoir and HIV-1 dissemination in vivo.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Safety and Immunogenicity of Heterologous Prime-Boost Immunisation with Plasmodium falciparum Malaria Candidate Vaccines, ChAd63 ME-TRAP and MVA ME- TRAP, in Healthy Gambian and Kenyan Adults

Caroline Ogwang; Muhammed O. Afolabi; Domtila Kimani; Ya Jankey Jagne; Susanne H. Sheehy; Carly M. Bliss; Christopher J. A. Duncan; Katharine A. Collins; Miguel G Knight; Eva Kimani; Nicholas A. Anagnostou; Eleanor Berrie; Sarah Moyle; Sarah C. Gilbert; Alexandra J. Spencer; Peninah Soipei; Jenny Mueller; Joseph Okebe; Stefano Colloca; Riccardo Cortese; Nicola K. Viebig; Rachel Roberts; Katherine Gantlett; Alison M. Lawrie; Alfredo Nicosia; Egeruan B. Imoukhuede; Philip Bejon; Britta C. Urban; Katie L. Flanagan; Katie Ewer

Background Heterologous prime boost immunization with chimpanzee adenovirus 63 (ChAd63) and Modified vaccinia Virus Ankara (MVA) vectored vaccines is a strategy recently shown to be capable of inducing strong cell mediated responses against several antigens from the malaria parasite. ChAd63-MVA expressing the Plasmodium falciparum pre-erythrocytic antigen ME-TRAP (multiple epitope string with thrombospondin-related adhesion protein) is a leading malaria vaccine candidate, capable of inducing sterile protection in malaria naïve adults following controlled human malaria infection (CHMI). Methodology We conducted two Phase Ib dose escalation clinical trials assessing the safety and immunogenicity of ChAd63-MVA ME-TRAP in 46 healthy malaria exposed adults in two African countries with similar malaria transmission patterns. Results ChAd63-MVA ME-TRAP was shown to be safe and immunogenic, inducing high-level T cell responses (median >1300 SFU/million PBMC). Conclusions ChAd63-MVA ME-TRAP is a safe and highly immunogenic vaccine regimen in adults with prior exposure to malaria. Further clinical trials to assess safety and immunogenicity in children and infants and protective efficacy in the field are now warranted. Trial Registration Pactr.org PACTR2010020001771828 Pactr.org PACTR201008000221638 ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01373879 NCT01373879 ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01379430 NCT01379430

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