| Literature DB >> 31684117 |
César López-Camacho1, Young Chan Kim2,3, Peter Abbink4, Rafael A Larocca5, Juha T Huiskonen6, Dan H Barouch7, Arturo Reyes-Sandoval8.
Abstract
Zika virus (ZIKV) is an emerging mosquito-borne flavivirus that has spread to more than 70 countries worldwide since 2015. Despite active research, there are currently no licensed vaccines or therapeutics. We have previously reported the development of various adenoviral vectored vaccine candidates (ChAdOx1 ZIKV) with the ability to stimulate effective immunity in mice and provide protection upon a ZIKV challenge model, using a non-adjuvanted single vaccination approach. In this study, we constructed various modified vaccinia Ankara (MVA) viruses to express the ZIKV Envelope (E) with modifications on the precursor membrane (prM) or on the C-terminus envelope transmembrane domain (TM), similar to our ChAdOx1 vaccine candidates. MVA-ZIKV vaccine candidates were evaluated as a non-adjuvanted single vaccination regimen against a ZIKV Brazilian isolate, using viraemia as the correlate of protection. Here, we report the induction of a modest level of anti-ZIKV E antibodies by all MVA vectored vaccines and sub-optimal efficacy in a ZIKV challenge model. Our results indicate the requirement of additional strategies when using MVA-ZIKV vaccines to afford sterile protection upon a non-adjuvanted and single vaccination regime.Entities:
Keywords: MVA; Zika virus; efficacy; envelope proteins; immunogenicity; mice; vaccines
Year: 2019 PMID: 31684117 PMCID: PMC6963679 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens8040216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Figure 1MVA-ZIKV vaccine designs. (a) Schematic representation of the genetic cassette used to produce the recombinant MVA vectors, containing the ZIKV structural genes shown in blue box. ((b), left panel) Enzyme restriction analysis of the MVA-ZIKV plasmids used to construct the recombinant viral vectors. Restriction released the tPA leading sequence (red box in Figure 1a) plus each of the ZIKV transgenes. Asterisks denote the MVA backbone plasmid. ((b), right panel) Flanking PCR analysis from DNA-purified virus to confirm the presence of the antigen expression cassette. (c) Transmission electron microscopy of purified MVA prME ΔTM preparation. Sucrose-purified virions were negative stained and processed for electron microscopy. Typical brick-shaped particles were detected [18]. Bar, 500 nm. (d) Expression of ZIKV immunogens by western blot of BHK21 cell extracts transduced with MVA-ZIKV vaccine candidates, using an anti-ZIKV E antibody as the primary antibody. A change in size can be appreciated in the monomeric form of ZIKV E (around 45 kDa for full length E, in comparison with the TM deleted version of E), asterisk.
Figure 2Immune responses elicited by MVA-ZIKV vaccines. BALB/c mice (n = 6) were intramuscularly immunised with a single dose of MVA encoding ZIKV antigens at 1 × 106 plaque forming units (PFU)/mouse. Serum samples were collected at 4 weeks and 12 weeks post immunisation. (a) Antibody responses elicited by MVA-ZIKV vaccine candidates at 4 weeks and (b) 12 weeks post immunisation were quantified by ELISA in plates coated with a ZIKV E protein [19]. (c) Cellular immune responses to MVA-ZIKV vaccine candidates. PBMCs IFNγ–producing cells after 4 weeks post immunisation were measured by (IFNγ) ex vivo ELISPOT, and 20-mer peptides spanning the ZIKV prME proteins at 10 μg/mL were used for stimulation. p-values were determined by one-way ANOVA and Tukey’s multiple comparisons test.
Figure 3Assessment of protective efficacy induced by MVA-ZIKV vaccines. (a) Naïve and vaccinated BABL/c mice (n = 5) were intravenously challenged with 100 PFU of ZIKV-BR strain, at four weeks post immunisation. After ZIKV challenge, viral loads were monitored for seven days. (b) Viral load kinetics in ZIKV-challenged groups were monitored to assess the protective efficacy. Graphs show days post-challenge on the x-axis versus viral loads on the y-axis. Continuous blue lines represent one mouse each, for each of the groups. (c) Relative viraemia at day 3 post-challenge, for each individual mouse and for each group was calculated based in the mean viremia from the naïve mice group. p-values were determined by one-way ANOVA and Tukey’s multiple comparisons test.