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Dive into the research topics where Shawn S. Jackson is active.

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Featured researches published by Shawn S. Jackson.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Neutralizing Antibodies to Adenovirus Serotype 5 Vaccine Vectors Are Directed Primarily against the Adenovirus Hexon Protein

Shawn M. Sumida; Diana M. Truitt; Angelique A. C. Lemckert; Ronald Vogels; Jerome Custers; Marylyn M. Addo; Shahin Lockman; Trevor Peter; Fred W. Peyerl; Michael G. Kishko; Shawn S. Jackson; Darci A. Gorgone; Michelle A. Lifton; Myron Essex; Bruce D. Walker; Jaap Goudsmit; Menzo Jans Emco Havenga; Dan H. Barouch

The utility of recombinant adenovirus serotype 5 (rAd5) vector-based vaccines for HIV-1 and other pathogens will likely be limited by the high prevalence of pre-existing Ad5-specific neutralizing Abs (NAbs) in human populations. However, the immunodominant targets of Ad5-specific NAbs in humans remain poorly characterized. In this study, we assess the titers and primary determinants of Ad5-specific NAbs in individuals from both the United States and the developing world. Importantly, median Ad5-specific NAb titers were >10-fold higher in sub-Saharan Africa compared with the United States. Moreover, hexon-specific NAb titers were 4- to 10-fold higher than fiber-specific NAb titers in these cohorts by virus neutralization assays using capsid chimeric viruses. We next performed adoptive transfer studies in mice to evaluate the functional capacity of hexon- and fiber-specific NAbs to suppress the immunogenicity of a prototype rAd5-Env vaccine. Hexon-specific NAbs were remarkably efficient at suppressing Env-specific immune responses elicited by the rAd5 vaccine. In contrast, fiber-specific NAbs exerted only minimal suppressive effects on rAd5 vaccine immunogenicity. These data demonstrate that functionally significant Ad5-specific NAbs are directed primarily against the Ad5 hexon protein in both humans and mice. These studies suggest a potential strategy for engineering novel Ad5 vectors to evade dominant Ad5-specific NAbs.


Journal of Immunology | 2002

Potent CD4+ T Cell Responses Elicited by a Bicistronic HIV-1 DNA Vaccine Expressing gp120 and GM-CSF

Dan H. Barouch; Sampa Santra; Klara Tenner-Racz; Paul Racz; Marcelo J. Kuroda; Joern E. Schmitz; Shawn S. Jackson; Michelle A. Lifton; Dan C. Freed; Helen C. Perry; Mary-Ellen Davies; John W. Shiver; Norman L. Letvin

Virus-specific CD4+ T cell responses have been shown to play a critical role in controlling HIV-1 replication. Candidate HIV-1 vaccines should therefore elicit potent CD4+ as well as CD8+ T cell responses. In this report we investigate the ability of plasmid GM-CSF to augment CD4+ T cell responses elicited by an HIV-1 gp120 DNA vaccine in mice. Coadministration of a plasmid expressing GM-CSF with the gp120 DNA vaccine led to only a marginal increase in gp120-specific splenocyte CD4+ T cell responses. However, immunization with a bicistronic plasmid that coexpressed gp120 and GM-CSF under control of a single promoter led to a dramatic augmentation of vaccine-elicited CD4+ T cell responses, as measured by both cellular proliferation and ELISPOT assays. This augmentation of CD4+ T cell responses was selective, since vaccine-elicited Ab and CD8+ T cell responses were not significantly changed by the addition of GM-CSF. A 100-fold lower dose of the gp120/GM-CSF bicistronic DNA vaccine was required to elicit detectable gp120-specific splenocyte proliferative responses compared with the monocistronic gp120 DNA vaccine. Consistent with these findings, i.m. injection of the gp120/GM-CSF bicistronic DNA vaccine evoked a more extensive cellular infiltrate at the site of inoculation than the monocistronic gp120 DNA vaccine. These results demonstrate that bicistronic DNA vaccines containing GM-CSF elicit remarkably potent CD4+ T cell responses and suggest that optimal Th cell priming requires the precise temporal and spatial codelivery of Ag and GM-CSF.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Neutralizing Antibodies and CD8+ T Lymphocytes both Contribute to Immunity to Adenovirus Serotype 5 Vaccine Vectors

Shawn M. Sumida; Diana M. Truitt; Michael G. Kishko; Janelle C. Arthur; Shawn S. Jackson; Darci A. Gorgone; Michelle A. Lifton; Wouter Koudstaal; Maria G. Pau; Stefan Kostense; Menzo Jans Emco Havenga; Jaap Goudsmit; Norman L. Letvin; Dan H. Barouch

ABSTRACT The high prevalence of preexisting immunity to adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5) in human populations will likely limit the immunogenicity and clinical utility of recombinant Ad5 vector-based vaccines for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and other pathogens. Ad5-specific neutralizing antibodies (NAbs) are thought to contribute substantially to anti-Ad5 immunity, but the potential importance of Ad5-specific T lymphocytes in this setting has not been fully characterized. Here we assess the relative contributions of Ad5-specific humoral and cellular immune responses in blunting the immunogenicity of a rAd5-Env vaccine in mice. Adoptive transfer of Ad5-specific NAbs resulted in a dramatic abrogation of Env-specific immune responses following immunization with rAd5-Env. Interestingly, adoptive transfer of Ad5-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes also resulted in a significant and durable suppression of rAd5-Env immunogenicity. These data demonstrate that NAbs and CD8+ T lymphocytes both contribute to immunity to Ad5. Novel adenovirus vectors that are currently being developed to circumvent the problem of preexisting anti-Ad5 immunity should therefore be designed to evade both humoral and cellular Ad5-specific immune responses.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2004

Recruitment and expansion of dendritic cells in vivo potentiate the immunogenicity of plasmid DNA vaccines

Shawn M. Sumida; Paul F. McKay; Diana M. Truitt; Michael G. Kishko; Janelle C. Arthur; Michael S. Seaman; Shawn S. Jackson; Darci A. Gorgone; Michelle A. Lifton; Norman L. Letvin; Dan H. Barouch

DCs are critical for priming adaptive immune responses to foreign antigens. However, the utility of harnessing these cells in vivo to optimize the immunogenicity of vaccines has not been fully explored. Here we investigate a novel vaccine approach that involves delivering synergistic signals that both recruit and expand DC populations at the site of antigen production. Intramuscular injection of an unadjuvanted HIV-1 envelope (env) DNA vaccine recruited few DCs to the injection site and elicited low-frequency, env-specific immune responses in mice. Coadministration of plasmids encoding the chemokine macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha (MIP-1alpha) and the DC-specific growth factor fms-like tyrosine kinase 3 ligand with the DNA vaccine resulted in the recruitment, expansion, and activation of large numbers of DCs at the site of inoculation. Consistent with these findings, coadministration of these plasmid cytokines also markedly augmented DNA vaccine---elicited cellular and humoral immune responses and increased protective efficacy against challenge with recombinant vaccinia virus. These data suggest that the availability of mature DCs at the site of inoculation is a critical rate-limiting factor for DNA vaccine immunogenicity. Synergistic recruitment and expansion of DCs in vivo may prove a practical strategy for overcoming this limitation and potentiating immune responses to vaccines as well as other immunotherapeutic strategies.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Plasmid Chemokines and Colony-Stimulating Factors Enhance the Immunogenicity of DNA Priming-Viral Vector Boosting Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Vaccines

Dan H. Barouch; Paul F. McKay; Shawn M. Sumida; Sampa Santra; Shawn S. Jackson; Darci A. Gorgone; Michelle A. Lifton; Bimal K. Chakrabarti; Ling Xu; Gary J. Nabel; Norman L. Letvin

ABSTRACT Heterologous “prime-boost” regimens that involve priming with plasmid DNA vaccines and boosting with recombinant viral vectors have been shown to elicit potent virus-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte responses. Increasing evidence, however, suggests that the utility of recombinant viral vectors in human populations will be significantly limited by preexisting antivector immunity. Here we demonstrate that the coadministration of plasmid chemokines and colony-stimulating factors with plasmid DNA vaccines markedly increases the immunogenicity of DNA prime-recombinant adenovirus serotype 5 (rAd5) boost and DNA prime-recombinant vaccinia virus (rVac) boost vaccine regimens in BALB/c mice. In mice with preexisting anti-Ad5 immunity, priming with the DNA vaccine alone followed by rAd5 boosting elicited only marginal immune responses. In contrast, cytokine-augmented DNA vaccine priming followed by rAd5 vector boosting was able to generate potent immune responses in mice with preexisting anti-Ad5 immunity. These data demonstrate that plasmid cytokines can markedly improve the immunogenicity of DNA prime-viral vector boost vaccine strategies and can partially compensate for antivector immunity.


Journal of Immunology | 2001

Cytokine Requirements for Induction of Systemic and Mucosal CTL After Nasal Immunization

Herman F. Staats; Curtis P. Bradney; William M. Gwinn; Shawn S. Jackson; Gregory D. Sempowski; Hua-Xin Liao; Norman L. Letvin; Barton F. Haynes

Cholera toxin (CT) is frequently used as an experimental adjuvant intranasally for the induction of systemic and mucosal immunity. However, CT is highly reactogenic and not approved for use in humans. To define the cytokine requirements for the nasal activation of the systemic and mucosal immune system, and to design new adjuvants with efficacy similar to CT, we defined the cytokines that were able to replace CT as a nasal adjuvant for the induction of CTL. BALB/c mice were nasally immunized with an HIV immunogen that contains an MHC class I-restricted CTL epitope ± cytokines and tested for HIV-specific immune responses. We found that combinations of IL-1α plus IL-18, IL-1α plus IL-12, and IL-1α plus IL-12 plus GM-CSF each induced optimal splenocyte anti-HIV CTL responses in immunized mice (range 60–71% peptide-specific 51Cr release). Peak H-2Dd-peptide tetramer-binding T cell responses induced by cytokine combinations were up to 5.5% of CD8+ PBMC. Nasal immunization with HIV immunogen and IL-1α, IL-12, and GM-CSF also induced Ag-specific IFN-γ-secreting cells in the draining cervical lymph node and the lung. The use of IL-1α, IL-12, and GM-CSF as nasal adjuvants was associated with an increased expression of MHC class II and B7.1 on nonlymphocytes within the nasal-associated lymphoid tissue/nasal mucosa. Thus, IL-1α, IL-12, IL-18, and GM-CSF are critical cytokines for the induction of systemic and mucosal CTL after nasal immunization. Moreover, these cytokines may serve as effective adjuvants for nasal vaccine delivery.


European Journal of Immunology | 2004

Recruitment of different subsets of antigen-presenting cells selectively modulates DNA vaccine-elicited CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocyte responses

Paul F. McKay; Dan H. Barouch; Sampa Santra; Shawn M. Sumida; Shawn S. Jackson; Darci A. Gorgone; Michelle A. Lifton; Norman L. Letvin

The immunogenicity of plasmid DNA vaccines may be limited by the availability of professional antigen‐presenting cells (APC) at the site of inoculation. Here we demonstrate that the types of APC recruited to the injection site can selectively modulate CD4+ or CD8+ T lymphocyte responses elicited by an HIV‐1 Env DNA vaccine in mice. Coadministration of plasmid GM‐CSF with the DNA vaccine resulted in the recruitment of macrophages to the site of inoculation and specifically augmented vaccine‐elicited CD4+ T lymphocyte responses. In contrast, coadministration of plasmid MIP‐1α with the DNA vaccine resulted in the recruitment of dendritic cells to the injection site and enhanced vaccine‐elicited CD8+ T lymphocyte responses. Interestingly, coadministration of both plasmid GM‐CSF and plasmid MIP‐1α with the DNA vaccine recruited both macrophages and dendritic cells and led to a synergistic and sustained augmentation of CD4+and CD8+ T lymphocyte responses. These data demonstrate the critical importance of locally recruited professional APC in determining the magnitude and nature of immune responses elicited by plasmid DNA vaccines. Moreover, these studies show that different subsets of professional APC can selectively modulate DNA vaccine‐elicited T lymphocyte responses.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Subsets of Memory Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes Elicited by Vaccination Influence the Efficiency of Secondary Expansion In Vivo

Michael S. Seaman; Fred W. Peyerl; Shawn S. Jackson; Michelle A. Lifton; Darci A. Gorgone; Jörn E. Schmitz; Norman L. Letvin

ABSTRACT Vaccine-elicited cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) should be long-lived memory cells that can rapidly expand in number following re-exposure to antigen. The present studies were initiated to analyze the ability of plasmid interleukin-12 (IL-12) to augment CTL responses in mice when delivered during the peak phase of an immune response elicited by a plasmid human immunodeficiency virus type 1 gp120 DNA vaccine. Delivery of plasmid IL-12 on day 10 postimmunization resulted in a robust expansion of gp120-specific CD8+ T cells, as measured by tetramer, gamma interferon ELISPOT, and functional-killing assays. Interestingly, this delayed administration of plasmid IL-12 had no significant effect on antigen-specific CD4+-T-cell and antibody responses. Phenotypic analyses suggested that administration of plasmid IL-12 near the time of the peak CTL response activated and expanded antigen-specific effector cells, preventing their loss through apoptosis. However, this IL-12-augmented population of gp120-specific CD8+ T cells did not efficiently expand following gp120 boost immunization, suggesting that these effector cells would be of little utility in expanding to contain a viral infection. Analyses of the phenotypic profile and anatomic distribution of the plasmid IL-12-augmented CTL population indicated that these lymphocytes were primarily effector memory rather than central memory T cells. These observations suggest that CTL-based vaccines should elicit central memory rather than effector memory T cells and illustrate the importance of monitoring the phenotype and functionality of vaccine-induced, antigen-specific CTL.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Role of genes that modulate host immune responses in the immunogenicity and pathogenicity of vaccinia virus.

Shawn S. Jackson; Petr O. Ilyinskii; Valerie Philippon; Linda Gritz; Alicia Gómez Yafal; Kimberly Zinnack; Kristin Beaudry; Kelledy Manson; Michelle A. Lifton; Marcelo J. Kuroda; Norman L. Letvin; Gail P. Mazzara; Dennis Panicali

ABSTRACT Poxvirus vaccine vectors, although capable of eliciting potent immune responses, pose serious health risks in immunosuppressed individuals. We therefore constructed five novel recombinant vaccinia virus vectors which contained overlapping deletions of coding regions for the B5R, B8R, B12R, B13R, B14R, B16R, B18R, and B19R immunomodulatory gene products and assessed them for both immunogenicity and pathogenicity. All five of these novel vectors elicited both cellular and humoral immunity to the inserted HIV-BH10 env comparable to that induced by the parental Wyeth strain vaccinia virus. However, deletion of these immunomodulatory genes did not increase the immunogenicity of these vectors compared with the parental vaccinia virus. Furthermore, four of these vectors were slightly less virulent and one was slightly more virulent than the Wyeth strain virus in neonatal mice. Attenuated poxviruses have potential use as safer alternatives to current replication-competent vaccinia virus. Improved vaccinia virus vectors can be generated by deleting additional genes to achieve a more significant viral attenuation.


Journal of Immunology | 2000

Functional Equivalency of B7-1 and B7-2 for Costimulating Plasmid DNA Vaccine-Elicited CTL Responses

Sampa Santra; Dan H. Barouch; Shawn S. Jackson; Marcelo J. Kuroda; Joern E. Schmitz; Michelle A. Lifton; Arlene H. Sharpe; Norman L. Letvin

A costimulatory signal in addition to an Ag-specific stimulus is required for optimal activation of T lymphocytes. CD28, the primary positive costimulatory receptor on T cells, has two identified ligands, B7-1 and B7-2. Whether B7-1 and B7-2 have identical, overlapping, or distinct functions remains unresolved. In this study, we show that mice lacking B7-2 were unable to generate CTL responses following immunization with a plasmid DNA vaccine. The ability of these B7-2-deficient mice to generate CTL responses following plasmid gp120 DNA vaccination was fully reconstituted by coadministering either a plasmid expressing B7-2 or B7-1. Moreover, the ability to generate CTL responses following plasmid DNA vaccination in mice lacking both B7-1 and B7-2 could be reconstituted by administering either plasmid B7-1 or plasmid B7-2 with the vaccine construct. These data demonstrate that either B7-1 or B7-2 administered concurrently with a plasmid DNA vaccine can fully costimulate vaccine-elicited CTL responses. Functional differences between B7-1 and B7-2 observed in vivo therefore may not reflect inherent differences in the interactions of CD28 with these ligands.

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Norman L. Letvin

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Michelle A. Lifton

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Dan H. Barouch

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Darci A. Gorgone

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Sampa Santra

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Jörn E. Schmitz

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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