| Literature DB >> 30962164 |
Rianne N Esquivel1, Ami Patel1, Sagar B Kudchodkar1, Daniel H Park1, Karin Stettler2, Martina Beltramello2, Jeffrey W Allen3, Janess Mendoza3, Stephanie Ramos3, Hyeree Choi1, Piyush Borole1, Kanika Asija1, Mamadou Bah1, Shareef Shaheen1, Jing Chen3, Jian Yan3, Amy C Durham4, Trevor R F Smith3, Kate Broderick3, Ghiabe Guibinga3, Kar Muthumani1, Davide Corti2, Laurent Humeau3, David B Weiner5.
Abstract
Zika virus (ZIKV) infection is endemic to several world regions, and many others are at high risk for seasonal outbreaks. Synthetic DNA-encoded monoclonal antibody (DMAb) is an approach that enables in vivo delivery of highly potent mAbs to control infections. We engineered DMAb-ZK190, encoding the mAb ZK190 neutralizing antibody, which targets the ZIKV E protein DIII domain. In vivo-delivered DMAb-ZK190 achieved expression levels persisting >10 weeks in mice and >3 weeks in non-human primate (NHPs), which is protective against ZIKV infectious challenge. This study is the first demonstration of infectious disease control in NHPs following in vivo delivery of a nucleic acid-encoded antibody, supporting the importance of this new platform.Entities:
Keywords: DMAb; DNA; DNA-encoded monoclonal antibody; Zika virus; antibody; immunoprophylaxis; infectious diseases; protection; rhesus macaque
Year: 2019 PMID: 30962164 PMCID: PMC6520333 DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2019.03.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ther ISSN: 1525-0016 Impact factor: 11.454
Figure 1In Vivo DMAb-ZK190 and DMAb-ZK190-LALA Pharmacokinetic Expression, Binding to ZIKV E Protein, and Neutralization Activity
Conditioned C57BL/6 mice were injected with a 200 μg dual-plasmid construct of either ZK190 (A) or ZK190-LALA (B) (n = 5). Human IgG1 was monitored in mouse serum for >70 days. Serum samples from mice administered DMAb-ZK190 and DMAb-ZK190-LALA were evaluated to confirm binding to ZIKV E protein (C–F). DMAb expression is compared with protein IgG by binding to ZIKV E protein by ELISA (C and D) and western blot loaded with Zika E protein. Western blots were cropped for clarity (white bar) (E and F) and probed with serum from DMAb-administered mice. For each experiment “n” refers to biological replicates. (G and H) Serial dilutions of day 7 sera from (G) DMAb-ZK190-injected and (H) DMAb-ZK190 LALA mice were evaluated in vitro in a flow-based assay for their ability to block ZIKV H/PF/2013 (100 pfu) infection of Vero cells. Protein ZK190 mAb or ZK190 LALA mAb were included as controls. Linear regression analysis was used to determine concentration of DMAb in sera that neutralized infection by 50% compared to wells received virus only. For each experiment, “n” refers to biological replicates.
Figure 2In Vivo Protection by DMAb-ZK190 and DMAb-ZK190-LALA
(A) Overview of the injection regimen. DMAbs were administered on day −2, and serum was collected on day 2 after lethal challenge with 106 PFU Zika Strain PR209. Animals were monitored for 21 days post-challenge for signs of disease and weight loss. (B) Serum human IgG levels at day 2 post-challenge. (C) Survival of ZK190 and ZK190-LALA DMAb-receiving mice (n = 8) compared to negative control (n = 8) and protein IgG (n = 6). (D and E) Percentage weight change for negative control group receiving DMAb empty vector pVax1 (100 μg/mouse) compared to mice receiving treatment group ZK190-LALA (300 μg) (D), ZK190 (300 μg) (E), or protein ZK190 (1 mg/kg). For each experiment, “n” refers to biological replicates. Error bars refer to SD.
Figure 3In Vivo Protection of Mouse Testes by DMAb-ZK190 and DMAb-ZK190-LALA in Low-Dose Challenge
(A) Overview of the injection regimen. DMAbs were administered on day −2, and serum was collected on day 2 after lethal challenge with 105 PFU Zika Strain PR209. Animals were monitored for 21 days post-challenge for signs of disease and weight loss. (B) Serum human IgG levels at day 2 post-challenge. (C) Survival of ZK190 and ZK190-LALA DMAb-receiving mice (n = 8) compared to negative control (n = 8) and protein IgG (N = 6). (D and E) Percentage weight change for negative control group receiving DMAb empty vector pVax1 (100 μg/mouse) compared to mice receiving treatment group ZK190-LALA (300 μg) (D), ZK190 (300 μg) (E), or protein ZK190 (1 mg/kg). (F) Testes sections from pVax1- and DMAb-treated groups were collected 21 days after challenge and stained with H&E for histology. The sections taken from representative, unprotected pVax1 control animals show pathology. Scale bar, 100 μm. (G) Whole testes from pVax1- (left) or ZK190 DMAb- (right) treated mice. Ruler displays centimeters. For each experiment “n” refers to biological replicates. Error bars refer to SD.
Figure 4In Vivo Protection against ZIKV Challenge in Rhesus Macaques following the Administration of DMAb-ZK190 or Naive Control
(A) Overview of the injection regimen in rhesus macaques. DMAbs were administered in 3 sequential administrations on days 0, 3, and 6, and serum was collected serially throughout the study. Macaques were challenged with 104 PFU ZIKV strain PRVABC59 on day 0. (B) DMAb-ZK190 (n = 5) serum human IgG levels during the course of the challenge experiment. (C) Naive control (n = 5) serum human IgG levels during the course of the challenge experiment. (D) Serum ZIKV viral loads in DMAb-ZK190-administered macaques following challenge (n = 5). (E) Serum ZIKV viral loads in naive control macaques following challenge (n = 5). For each experiment, “n” refers to biological replicates.