| Literature DB >> 29861435 |
Jeffrey W Froude1, Andrew S Herbert2, Thibaut Pelat3, Sebastian Miethe4, Samantha E Zak5, Jennifer M Brannan6, Russell R Bakken7, Alexander R Steiner8, Gang Yin9, Trevor J Hallam10, Aaron K Sato11, Michael Hust12, Philippe Thullier13, John M Dye14.
Abstract
Sudan virus (SUDV) and Ebola viruses (EBOV) are both members of the Ebolavirus genus and have been sources of epidemics and outbreaks for several decades. We present here the generation and characterization of cross-reactive antibodies to both SUDV and EBOV, which were produced in a cell-free system and protective against SUDV in mice. A non-human primate, cynomolgus macaque, was immunized with viral-replicon particles expressing the glycoprotein of SUDV-Boniface (8A). Two separate antibody fragment phage display libraries were constructed after four immunogen injections. Both libraries were screened first against the SUDV and a second library was cross-selected against EBOV-Kikwit. Sequencing of 288 selected clones from the two distinct libraries identified 58 clones with distinct VH and VL sequences. Many of these clones were cross-reactive to EBOV and SUDV and able to neutralize SUDV. Three of these recombinant antibodies (X10B1, X10F3, and X10H2) were produced in the scFv-Fc format utilizing a cell-free production system. Mice that were challenged with SUDV-Boniface receiving 100µg of the X10B1/X10H2 scFv-Fc combination 6 and 48-h post-exposure demonstrated partial protection individually and complete protection as a combination. The data herein suggests these antibodies may be promising candidates for further therapeutic development.Entities:
Keywords: Ebola; Sudan virus; antibody; biodefense; cell-free production; phage display; protection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29861435 PMCID: PMC6024315 DOI: 10.3390/v10060286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Clones which were reactive to both EBOV and SUDV irradiated virus: (a) scFv phage elution titers and (b) scFv phage reactivity following consecutive panning rounds for the multi-step library panning. (c) Phage elution titers from the third round of the parent library (D10-RIII) with each of the parallel panning rounds to Ebola GP at 5, 10, and 20 washes. (d) Reactivity to the whole irradiated antigen (IRR) or glycoprotein (GP) for the parental and cross paining of the SUDV phage against EBOV.
Affinity and neutralization screening. Affinities were measured by surface plasmon resonance (SPR) utilizing Biacore utilizing the glycoprotein for each virus coated to the chip. Neutralization screenings were set at 50 ug/mL for each antibody to either SUDV Boniface or EBOV Kikwit and assessed by plaque reduction and neutralization titer (PRNT) assay.
| Affinity (nM) | Neutralization Screen 1 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antibody | SUDV | EBOV | SUDV | EBOV |
| X10B1 | 17.3 | 13.3 | +++ | + |
| X10B6 | 8.3 | 5.9 | +++ | - |
| X10H2 | 7.0 | ND 2 | +++ | + |
| X10F3 | 61.0 | ND 2 | +++ | + |
| X10C9 | 12.0 | ND 2 | +++ | - |
| X10H4 | 8.5 | 6.3 | +++ | - |
| X10G8 | 42.0 | ND 2 | +++ | ND 2 |
| X10H11 | 20.0 | 26.1 | +++ | + |
| X10H12 | 8.9 | 13.1 | + | - |
| X20C3 | 14.0 | 8.5 | - | - |
| X20D6 | 18.7 | 32.0 | +++ | ND 2 |
| X20F12 | 14.0 | 12.4 | - | - |
| X20A4 | 9.0 | 5.9 | - | ND 2 |
| X20A9 | 29.0 | 9.0 | - | ND 2 |
1 +++ Greater than 80%, ++ 50-80%, + 20-50%, - 0-20%; 2 ND – Not Determined/Not Tested.
Figure 2Down-selected antibodies neutralizing activity was evaluated by PRNT. Serially diluted mAbs were mixed in complete MEM supplemented with 10% FBS with SUDV at a constant viral titer of 65 pfu prior to adding in to Vero cells for a 1 h incubation. Wells were overlaid with 1% agarose in Eagle’s basal medium (EBME) with 10% FBS and 0.1% gentamicin and returned to the incubator On day 7, a 1% agarose secondary overlay containing 4% neutral red was added and after one more day at 37 °C, plaques were counted.
Figure 3Cell-free expression of candidate scFv-Fc antibody fragments. (a) Representation of the structure of the three antibody fragments utilized in this study. The typical IgG format is shown on the left, the scFv format utilized for binding and neutralization in the center, and the scFv-Fc format utilized in neutralization and protection studies on the right. (b) Coomassie stained SDS-PAGE Gel of purified scFv-Fcs. Precision Plus Protein™ Standards (BioRad, Hercules, CA, USA); Lane 2: X10F3; Lane 3: X10H2; Lane 4: X10B1. (c) Titers from the cell-free expression of the candidate scFv-Fcs.
Figure 4(a) Percent survival following the challenge of IFNAR-/- mice administered SUDV GP specific antibodies in the scFv-Fc format. Each mouse (n = 10 per antibody group or n = 5 for the PBS control) was challenged with 1000 pfu SUDV Boniface on D0; (b) weight loss of IFNAR-/- mice administered SUDV GP specific antibodies. Each mouse (n = 10 per antibody group) was administered 100 μg of total antibody (100 µg for single administration or 50 µg/antibody for the combination groups) the indicated treatment or PBS (n = 5) on days 0 (1 h post) and 2. Mice were challenged with 1000 pfu SUDV Boniface on D0; (c) percent survival; and (d) weight loss following the re-challenge of IFNAR-/- mice administered SUDV GP specific antibodies. Each mouse (n remaining from challenge study group or n = 5 for the PBS control) was rechallenged with 1000 pfu SUDV Boniface on D35 of the original study, indicated as D0 above. All p-values are assessed against irrelevant controls.