| Literature DB >> 28401907 |
K Sumathy1, Bharathi Kulkarni1, Ravi Kumar Gondu1, Sampath Kumar Ponnuru1, Nagaraju Bonguram1, Rakesh Eligeti1, Sindhuja Gadiyaram1, Usha Praturi1, Bhushan Chougule1, Latha Karunakaran1, Krishna M Ella1.
Abstract
Zika virus (ZIKV) is a mosquito-borne flavivirus that causes asymptomatic infection or presents only mild symptoms in majority of those infected. However, vaccination for ZIKV is a public health priority due to serious congenital and neuropathological abnormalities observed as a sequelae of the virus infection in the recent epidemics. We have developed an inactivated virus vaccine with the African MR 766 strain. Here we show that two doses of the vaccine provided 100% efficacy against mortality and disease following challenge with homotypic MR 766 and the heterotypic FSS 13025 ZIKV strains in the Type I and Type II interferon deficient AG129 mice. Two doses of the vaccine elicited high titer of neutralizing antibodies in Balb/c mice, and the vaccine antisera conferred protection against virus challenge in passively immunized mice. The studies were useful to rationalize vaccine doses for protective efficacy. Furthermore, the vaccine antisera neutralized the homotypic and heterotypic ZIKV strains in vitro with equivalent efficiency. Our study suggests a single ZIKV serotype, and that the development of an effective vaccine may not be limited by the choice of virus strain.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28401907 PMCID: PMC5388871 DOI: 10.1038/srep46375
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a–c) Protective efficacy of ZIKV vaccine in AG129 mice. (a) Percent survival in vaccinated AG129 mice after challenge with 104 PFU of (●) ZIKV-FSS 13025, or (▲) ZIKV-MR 766, and in the control mice that received equivalent titers of (■) ZIKV-FSS 13025, or (▼) ZIKV-MR 766. The mice in all four groups (n = 8/group) were monitored for survival up to 20 days after virus challenge. (b) Mean health scores of the four groups following virus challenge are depicted for 20 days. Health scores were calculated according to the parameters described in Table 1. Error bars represent s.d. (c) Viremia was estimated on days 4 and 6 after virus challenge in three animals from each group, and expressed as PFU/ml. Red bars reflect the mean of three values. The results are shown from a single experiment.
Parameters for assessment of disease symptoms in AG129 mice.
| Score | Abbreviation | Description | Appearance | Mobility | Attitude |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | H | healthy | smooth coat; bright eyes | active, scurrying, burrowing | alert |
| 2 | SR | slightly ruffled | slightly ruffled coat (usually only around head and neck) | active, scurrying, burrowing | alert |
| 3 | R | ruffled | ruffled coat throughout body; a ‘wet’ appearance | active, scurrying, burrowing | alert |
| 4 | S | sick | very ruffled coat; slightly closed, inset eyes | walking, but no scurrying | mildly lethargic |
| 5 | VS | very sick | very ruffled coat; closed, inset eyes | slow, or no movement; will return to upright position if put on its side | extremely lethargic |
| 6 | E | euthanize | very ruffled coat; closed, inset eyes; moribund | no movement or uncontrollable, spastic movements; will not return to upright position if put on its side | noticeable distress |
| 7 | D | deceased | — | — | — |
Well-defined parameters were used to assess the severity of clinical disease following virus challenge in vaccinated and control AG129 mice. The health scores are depicted in an ascending scale of 1 to 7, with 1 for healthy, followed by progressive morbidity to death with a score of 7.
Figure 2(a–f) Immunogenicity of Zika vaccine. (a) Serum neutralizing antibody titers by PRNT50 following vaccination with two doses of 5 μg or 10 μg per dose in Balb/c mice (n = 8/group) is depicted as mean log titers with 95% c.i. and (b) antibody binding to purified inactivated ZIKV was estimated by ELISA and the antibody titers are expressed as mean log serum dilution with 95% c.i. The increase in antibody titers by PRNT50 and ELISA were significant (P < 0.0001) when compared by two-tailed paired t-test between the prime and boost in both the dose groups. Unpaired t-test between the 5 μg and 10 μg prime, and between 5 μg and 10 μg boost doses gave P values of 0.64 and 0.031 respectively in two-tailed analyses. (c) Viremia in each of the vaccinated mice up to 144 hours after challenge with 105 PFU of ZIKV MR 766 in the 5 μg and in (d) the 10 μg dose groups was undetectable. (e) Plasma virus titers in the individual placebo control recipient mice up to 144 hours after virus challenge. (f) Serum neutralizing antibody titers 7 days after virus challenge in the placebo control, and in the 5 and 10 μg vaccinated groups are expressed as mean log PRNT50 titers. The red bar is the mean and the error bars represent 95% c.i. by One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). All the samples at each time point were assayed in triplicates, and the results are from a single experiment.
Figure 3(a–c) Passive immunization in mice. (a) Serum neutralizing antibody titers in vaccine antisera recipient Balb/c mice (n = 5/group), 24 hours following intraperitoneal injection of two-fold serial dilutions of 1:1, 1:2, 1:4 or 1:8 of rabbit vaccine antisera (groups I, II, III and IV) and in rabbit pre-immune sera recipient control mice. (b) Undetectable plasma virus titers in passively immunized mice following challenge with 105.5 PFU of ZIKV MR 766 by i.v. (c) Plasma virus titers in the control animals following virus challenge, expressed as PFU/ml. Red bars indicate mean values. All the samples from individual mice at each time point were assayed in triplicates, and the results are from a single experiment.