Non-cytolytic re-engineering of a viral vaccine vector enables durable effector-memory T cell immunity by reinforcing type I IFN induction
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Replication-deficient viral vector systems hold promise for CD8 T cell-based vaccination, but the molecular mechanisms accounting for platform-specific differences in immunogenicity remain ill- defined. When comparing prototypic single-cycle vaccine delivery platforms we found that lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus-based vectors (rLCMV), which are non-cytolytic, elicited more durable and effector-memory-differentiated CD8 T cell responses than vectors based on cytolytic vesicular stomatitis virus (rVSV). Hence we re-engineered rVSV to be non-cytolytic (rVSVMq). This vector induced more durable and effector-differentiated CD8 T cell memory than the parental rVSV and it afforded superior protection against Listeria challenge. Improved CD8 T cell responses of non-cytolytic rVSVMq were driven by a reinforced type I interferon (IFN-I) response and its direct sensing by vaccination-induced CD8 T cells. Many vector cargo-specific CD8 T cells in the splenic marginal zone of rVSVMq- or rLCMV-vaccinated mice were in contact with vector cargo-expressing cells that co- expressed type I interferon. In contrast, rVSV-vectored cargo-expressing contacts of specific CD8 T cells were largely IFN type I-negative. Thereby, vaccination with non-cytolytic viral vectors offered an opportunity for CD8 T cells to integrate peptide-MHC and IFN-I signals during priming. These mechanistic insights should help to refine vaccines aimed at eliciting durable and protective effector- memory CD8 T cell immunity.