Literature DB >> 10888616

Effective vaccine for lassa fever.

S P Fisher-Hoch1, L Hutwagner, B Brown, J B McCormick.   

Abstract

Lassa fever has been estimated to cause 5,000 deaths annually in West Africa. Recently, war in the zone where Lassa fever is hyperendemic has severely impeded control and treatment. Vaccination is the most viable control measure. There is no correlation between antibody levels and outcome in human patients, and inactivated vaccines produce high titers of antibodies to all viral proteins but do not prevent virus replication and death in nonhuman primates. Accordingly, we vaccinated 44 macaques with vaccinia virus-expressed Lassa virus structural proteins separately and in combination, with the object of inducing a predominantly TH1-type immune response. Following Lassa virus challenge, all unvaccinated animals died (0% survival). Nine of 10 animals vaccinated with all proteins survived (90% survival). Although no animals that received full-length glycoprotein alone had a high titer of antibody, 17 of 19 survived challenge (88%). In contrast, all animals vaccinated with nucleoprotein developed high titers of antibody but 12 of 15 died (20% survival). All animals vaccinated with single glycoproteins, G1 or G2, died, but all those that received both single glycoproteins (G1 plus G2) at separate sites survived, showing that both glycoproteins are independently important in protection. Neither group had demonstrable antibody levels prior to challenge. We demonstrate that in primates, immune responses to epitopes on both glycoproteins are required to protect against lethal challenge with Lassa virus without having untoward side effects and that this protection is likely to be primarily cell mediated. We show that an effective, safe vaccine against Lassa virus can and should be made and that its evaluation for human populations is a matter of humanitarian priority.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10888616      PMCID: PMC112194          DOI: 10.1128/jvi.74.15.6777-6783.2000

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Virol        ISSN: 0022-538X            Impact factor:   5.103


  38 in total

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3.  Completion of the Lassa fever virus sequence and identification of a RING finger open reading frame at the L RNA 5' End.

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Review 4.  Neutralizing antiviral B cell responses.

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Journal:  Virus Genes       Date:  1998       Impact factor: 2.332

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  86 in total

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4.  Mucosal immunization with Salmonella typhimurium expressing Lassa virus nucleocapsid protein cross-protects mice from lethal challenge with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus.

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5.  Safety, immunogenicity, and efficacy of the ML29 reassortant vaccine for Lassa fever in small non-human primates.

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6.  Human-monoclonal-antibody therapy protects nonhuman primates against advanced Lassa fever.

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Review 7.  VaxCelerate II: rapid development of a self-assembling vaccine for Lassa fever.

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Review 8.  The search for animal models for Lassa fever vaccine development.

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9.  Early and strong immune responses are associated with control of viral replication and recovery in lassa virus-infected cynomolgus monkeys.

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10.  LCMV-mediated hepatitis in rhesus macaques: WE but not ARM strain activates hepatocytes and induces liver regeneration.

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Journal:  Arch Virol       Date:  2004-08-30       Impact factor: 2.574

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