Literature DB >> 11312335

Passive transfer of antibodies protects immunocompetent and imunodeficient mice against lethal Ebola virus infection without complete inhibition of viral replication.

M Gupta1, S Mahanty, M Bray, R Ahmed, P E Rollin.   

Abstract

Ebola hemorrhagic fever is a severe, usually fatal illness caused by Ebola virus, a member of the filovirus family. The use of nonhomologous immune serum in animal studies and blood from survivors in two anecdotal reports of Ebola hemorrhagic fever in humans has shown promise, but the efficacy of these treatments has not been demonstrated definitively. We have evaluated the protective efficacy of polyclonal immune serum in a mouse model of Ebola virus infection. Our results demonstrate that mice infected subcutaneously with live Ebola virus survive infection and generate high levels of anti-Ebola virus immunoglobulin G (IgG). Passive transfer of immune serum from these mice before challenge protected upto 100% of naive mice against lethal Ebola virus infection. Protection correlated with the level of anti-Ebola virus IgG titers, and passive treatment with high-titer antiserum was associated with a delay in the peak of viral replication. Transfer of immune serum to SCID mice resulted in 100% survival after lethal challenge with Ebola virus, indicating that antibodies alone can protect from lethal disease. Thus antibodies suppress or delay viral growth, provide protection against lethal Ebola virus infection, and may not require participation of other immune components for protection.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11312335      PMCID: PMC114218          DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.10.4649-4654.2001

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


  23 in total

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3.  Efficacy of immune plasma in treatment of Argentine haemorrhagic fever and association between treatment and a late neurological syndrome.

Authors:  J I Maiztegui; N J Fernandez; A J de Damilano
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Authors:  D A Enria; A M Briggiler; S Levis; D Vallejos; J I Maiztegui; P G Canonico
Journal:  Antiviral Res       Date:  1987-07       Impact factor: 5.970

5.  Prospective, double-blind, concurrent, placebo-controlled clinical trial of intravenous ribavirin therapy of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome.

Authors:  J W Huggins; C M Hsiang; T M Cosgriff; M Y Guang; J I Smith; Z O Wu; J W LeDuc; Z M Zheng; J M Meegan; Q N Wang
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6.  Ribavirin prophylaxis and therapy for experimental argentine hemorrhagic fever.

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9.  A nosocomial outbreak of Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever at Tygerberg Hospital. Part IV. Preventive and prophylactic measures.

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10.  Lassa fever. Effective therapy with ribavirin.

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  48 in total

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Review 2.  Ebola virus pathogenesis: implications for vaccines and therapies.

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5.  Pathophysiology of Ebola Virus Infection: Current Challenges and Future Hopes.

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6.  Replication-deficient ebolavirus as a vaccine candidate.

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7.  Use of monoclonal antibodies against Hendra and Nipah viruses in an antigen capture ELISA.

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8.  A whole virus pandemic influenza H1N1 vaccine is highly immunogenic and protective in active immunization and passive protection mouse models.

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9.  Ebola virus-like particles protect from lethal Ebola virus infection.

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10.  A paramyxovirus-vectored intranasal vaccine against Ebola virus is immunogenic in vector-immune animals.

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