| Literature DB >> 31402910 |
Seyhan Boyoglu-Barnum1, Tatiana Chirkova2, Larry J Anderson2.
Abstract
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a leading cause of severe lower respiratory tract disease in young children and a substantial contributor to respiratory tract disease throughout life and as such a high priority for vaccine development. However, after nearly 60 years of research no vaccine is yet available. The challenges to developing an RSV vaccine include the young age, 2-4 months of age, for the peak of disease, the enhanced RSV disease associated with the first RSV vaccine, formalin-inactivated RSV with an alum adjuvant (FI-RSV), and difficulty achieving protection as illustrated by repeat infections with disease that occur throughout life. Understanding the biology of infection and disease pathogenesis has and will continue to guide vaccine development. In this paper, we review the roles that RSV proteins play in the biology of infection and disease pathogenesis and the corresponding contribution to live attenuated and subunit RSV vaccines. Each of RSV's 11 proteins are in the design of one or more vaccines. The G protein's contribution to disease pathogenesis through altering host immune responses as well as its role in the biology of infection suggest it can make a unique contribution to an RSV vaccine, both live attenuated and subunit vaccines. One of G's potential unique contributions to a vaccine is the potential for anti-G immunity to have an anti-inflammatory effect independent of virus replication. Though an anti-viral effect is essential to an effective RSV vaccine, it is important to remember that the goal of a vaccine is to prevent disease. Thus, other effects of the infection, such as G's alteration of the host immune response may provide opportunities to induce responses that block this effect and improve an RSV vaccine. Keeping in mind the goal of a vaccine is to prevent disease and not virus replication may help identify new strategies for other vaccine challenges, such as improving influenza vaccines and developing HIV vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: RSV (respiratory syncytial virus); biology of infection; pathogenesis; protective immunity; vaccine development
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31402910 PMCID: PMC6677153 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01675
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
RSV proteins in live attenuated or subunit vaccines.
| NS1 | 139 aa | Inhibits type 1 interferon production to block host response to control infection | Attenuation when deleted or codon de-optimized | None |
| NS2 | 124 aa | Inhibits type 1 interferon production to block host response to control infection | Attenuation when deleted or codon de-optimized | None |
| Nucleoprotein (N) | 391 aa | Nucleocapsid formation and T cell epitopes | Attenuation or temperature sensitivity when mutated | Induce T cell immunity |
| Phosphoprotein (P) | 241 aa | Nucleocapsid formation, replication | Attenuation when codon pair de-optimized | Platform for RSV VLPs |
| Matrix protein (M) | 256 aa | Envelop, virion assembly | Attenuation and temperature sensitivity when the gene start signal mutated | Induce T cell immunity and platform for RSV VLPs |
| Small hydrophobic (SH) | 64 aa | Ion channel | Attenuation when deleted or codon pair de-optimized | Induce ADCC antibodies to decrease virus replication |
| G protein | 292-319 aa | Attachment and immune modulation | Attenuation when deleted and improved safety and immunogenicity when mutated | Induce antibodies to inhibit virus replication by blocking binding to the cell surface receptors CX3CR1 and glycosaminoglycans and/or ADCC and to block virus-induced inflammation |
| F protein | 574 aa | Attachment, entry, fusion | Attenuation when mutated or codon pair de-optimized and improved protective immunity and virus stability when mutated | Induce antibodies to inhibit virus replication by blocking fusion and possibly by ADCC |
| M2-1 protein | 194 aa | Anti-termination factor during transcription | Attenuation when mutated | Induce T cell immunity, platform for RSV VLPs |
| M2-2 protein | 90 aa | Switch from transcription to replication | Attenuation and enhanced immunity when deleted | None |
| L protein | 2,165 aa | Viral polymerase | Attenuation when mutated or codon pair de-optimized | None |
Adapted with permission from Anderson (.
Figure 1Enhanced disease prevention with the addition of G to an F protein vaccine. The three schematics represent disease pathogenesis associated with no vaccine (1st schematic), an F protein vaccine (2nd schematic), and an F + G protein vaccine (3rd schematic). For all three, two types of disease pathogenesis are represented, one associated with virus replication and cytopathology (above the line) and the other induced by the RSV G protein (below the line). In mice, G induced disease includes increased inflammatory cells and mucus in the lungs and increased signs of obstructive airway disease and is not dependent on level of virus replication (95–97). In the second schematic, an F protein vaccine prevents much but not all virus replication and much of the disease pathogenesis represented above the line. In the third schematic, addition of G to an F protein also prevents disease pathogenesis represented below the line. The width of the arrows indicate level of virus replication, cytopathology/inflammation, G-inflammation, or residual disease.