| Literature DB >> 21349211 |
Emmie de Wit1, Heinz Feldmann, Vincent J Munster.
Abstract
Since its discovery in 1976, Ebolavirus has caused periodic outbreaks of viral hemorrhagic fever associated with severe and often fatal disease. Ebolavirus is endemic in Central Africa and the Philippines. Although there is currently no approved treatment available, the past 10 years has seen remarkable progress in our understanding of the pathogenicity of Ebolavirus and the development of prophylactic and post-exposure therapies against it. In vitro and in vivo experiments have shown that Ebolavirus pathogenicity is multifactorial, including viral and host determinants. Besides their function in the virus replication cycle, the viral glycoprotein, nucleoprotein, minor matrix protein and polymerase cofactor are viral determinants of pathogenicity, with evasion of the host innate and adaptive immune responses as the main mechanism. Although no licensed Ebolavirus vaccines are currently available, vaccine research in non-human primates, the 'gold standard' animal model for Ebolavirus, has produced several promising candidates. A combination of DNA vaccination and a recombinant adenovirus serotype 5 boost resulted in cross-protective immunity in non-human primates. A recombinant vesicular stomatitis vaccine vector protected non-human primates in pre- and post-exposure challenge studies. Several antiviral therapies are currently under investigation, but only a few of these have been tested in non-human primate models. Antisense therapies, in which oligonucleotides inhibit viral replication, have shown promising results in non-human primates following post-exposure treatment. In light of the severity of Ebolavirus disease and the observed increase in Ebolavirus outbreaks over the past decade, the expedited translation of potential candidate therapeutics and vaccines from bench to bedside is currently the most challenging task for the field. Here, we review the current state of Ebolavirus research, with emphasis on prophylactic and therapeutic intervention strategies.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21349211 PMCID: PMC3092090 DOI: 10.1186/gm219
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Med ISSN: 1756-994X Impact factor: 11.117
Chronology of Ebolavirus outbreaks
| Year | Location | Virus | Species |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1976 | Democratic Republic of Congo | ZEBOV | Humans |
| 1976 | Sudan | SEBOV | Humans |
| 1977 | Democratic Republic of Congo | ZEBOV | Humans |
| 1979 | Sudan | SEBOV | Humans |
| 1989-1990 | USA | REBOV | Cynomolgus macaques |
| 1992 | Italy | REBOV | Cynomolgus macaques |
| 1994 | Gabon | ZEBOV | Humans |
| 1994 | Ivory Coast | CIEBOV | Chimpanzees, humans |
| 1995 | Democratic Republic of Congo | ZEBOV | Humans |
| 1996 | Gabon | ZEBOV | Humans |
| 1996 | Gabon | ZEBOV | Humans |
| 1996 | USA | REBOV | Cynomolgus macaques |
| 2000-2001 | Uganda | SEBOV | Humans |
| 2001-2002* | Gabon | ZEBOV | Humans, gorillas, duikers |
| 2001-2005* | Republic of Congo | ZEBOV | Humans, gorillas, chimpanzees, duikers |
| 2004 | Sudan | SEBOV | Humans |
| 2007-2008* | Republic of Congo | ZEBOV | Humans |
| 2007-2008 | Uganda | BEBOV | Humans |
| 2008 | Philippines | REBOV | Swine |
*Multiple independent outbreaks. Abbreviations: BEBOV, Bundibugyo ebolavirus; CIEBOV, Côte d'Ivoire ebolavirus; REBOV, Reston ebolavirus; SEBOV, Sudan ebolavirus; ZEBOV, Zaire ebolavirus.
Figure 1Determinants of . Schematic representation of an Ebolavirus particle. The roles of GP, NP, VP24 and VP35 in the pathogenesis of EBOV, as discussed in the main text, are indicated.
Promising vaccine and antiviral drug development for the prevention and treatment of Ebolavirus
| Treatment | Efficacy | Prophylactic | Therapeutic | Status | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vaccines | |||||
| DNA vaccines | Rodents and NHPs | Yes | Unknown | Phase I clinical trails | [ |
| Adenovirus | Rodents and NHPs | Yes | Unknown | Phase I clinical trails | [ |
| rVSV-EBOV | Rodents and NHPs | Yes | Yes | Experimental | [ |
| HPIV3-EBOV | Rodents and NHPs | Yes | Unknown | Experimental | [ |
| EBOV-VLPs | Rodents and NHPs | Yes | Unknown | Experimental | [ |
| Replication-deficient ZEBOV | Rodents | Yes | Unknown | Experimental | [ |
| rhAPC | Partial in NHPs | Unknown | Yes | Licensed* | [ |
| rNAPc2 | Partial in NHPs | Yes | Yes | Phase II clinical trials† | [ |
| FGI-103, FGI-104 and FGI-106 | Rodents | Yes | Yes‡ | Experimental | [ |
| Antisense oligonucleotides | Rodents and NHPs | Yes | Yes | Experimental | [ |
*Licensed for the treatment of sepsis-induced coagulation disorders. †The antithrombotic potential of rNAPc2 in orthopedic surgery and coronary revascularization was tested. ‡Only FGI-106 was tested therapeutically. Abbreviations: HPIV3, human parainfluenza virus type 3; NHP, non-human primate; rhAPC, recombinant human activated protein C; rNAPc2, nematode anticoagulant protein c2; rVSV, recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus; VLP, virus-like particle.