| Literature DB >> 31799896 |
Hyeree Choi1, Sagar B Kudchodkar1, Emma L Reuschel1, Kanika Asija1, Piyush Borole1, Sangya Agarwal1, Lucas Van Gorder1, Charles C Reed2, Gayathri Gulendran3, Stephanie Ramos2, Kate E Broderick2, J Joseph Kim2, Kenneth E Ugen4, Gary Kobinger5, Don L Siegel3, David B Weiner1, Kar Muthumani1.
Abstract
Significant concerns have arisen over the past 3 y from the increased global spread of the mosquito-borne flavivirus, Zika. Accompanying this spread has been an increase in cases of the devastating birth defect microcephaly as well as of Guillain-Barré syndrome in adults in many affected countries. Currently there is no vaccine or therapy for this infection; however, we sought to develop a combination approach that provides more rapid and durable protection than traditional vaccination alone. A novel immune-based prophylaxis/therapy strategy entailing the facilitated delivery of a synthetic DNA consensus prME vaccine along with DNA-encoded anti-ZIKV envelope monoclonal antibodies (dMAb) were developed and evaluated for antiviral efficacy. This immediate and persistent protection strategy confers the ability to overcome shortcomings inherent with conventional active vaccination or passive immunotherapy. A collection of novel dMAbs were developed which were potent against ZIKV and could be expressed in serum within 24-48 h of in vivo administration. The DNA vaccine, from a previous development, was potent after adaptive immunity was developed, protecting against infection, brain and testes pathology in relevant mouse challenge models and in an NHP challenge. Delivery of potent dMAbs protected mice from the same murine viral challenge within days of delivery. Combined injection of dMAb and the DNA vaccine afforded rapid and long-lived protection in this challenge model, providing an important demonstration of the advantage of this synergistic approach to pandemic outbreaks.Entities:
Keywords: DNA vaccine; Zika virus; antibodies; dMAb-DNA encoded monoclonal antibodies; immunotherapy; vaccination
Year: 2019 PMID: 31799896 PMCID: PMC7227701 DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2019.1688038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Vaccin Immunother ISSN: 2164-5515 Impact factor: 3.452