| Literature DB >> 32461819 |
Thomas Tipih1, Felicity Jane Burt1,2.
Abstract
Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) is a severe human disease with mortality rates of up to 30%. The disease is widespread in Africa, Asia, the Middle East and Eastern Europe. The last few years have seen disease emergence in Spain for the first time and disease re-emergence in other regions of the world after periods of inactivity. Factors, such as climate change, movement of infected ticks, animals, and changes in human activity, are likely to broaden endemic foci. There are therefore concerns that CCHF might emerge in currently nonendemic regions. The absence of approved vaccines or therapies heightens these concerns; thus Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) is listed by the World Health Organization as a priority organism. However, the current sporadic nature of CCHF cases may call for targeted vaccination of risk groups as opposed to mass vaccinations. CCHF vaccine development has accelerated in recent years, partly because of the discovery of CCHF animal models. In this review, we discuss CCHF risk groups who are most likely to benefit from vaccine development, the merits and demerits of available CCHF animal models, and the various approaches which have been explored for CCHF vaccine development. Lastly, we present concluding remarks and research areas which can be further explored to enhance the available CCHFV vaccine data. © Thomas Tipih and Felicity Jane Burt 2020; Published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.Entities:
Keywords: Crimean–Congo hemorrhagic fever virus; orthonairovirus; recombinant protein; vaccine development; vaccine vector; virus-like replicon particles
Year: 2020 PMID: 32461819 PMCID: PMC7247048 DOI: 10.1089/biores.2019.0057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biores Open Access ISSN: 2164-7844
FIG. 1.Global geographic summary of countries with reported CCHF cases, serological evidence and presence of CCHFV in ticks.[1,7–48] CCHF, Crimean–Congo hemorrhagic fever; CCHFV, Crimean–Congo hemorrhagic fever virus.
Approaches in the Development of CCHFV Vaccines
| Vaccine type | CCHFV antigen[ | Mouse model | Dose[ | Antibody response | T cell response | Challenge[ | Efficacy, % survival | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recombinant protein | Gc-e ectodomain (adjuvanted) | STAT-1−/− | 1.4 μg (i.p.) day 0 and 21 | Yes[ | NT | 100 pfu CCHFV IbAr 10200 strain (s.c.) day 42 | 0% | [ |
| Transgenic plants | Gn and Gc (Iranian strain) | BALB/c | Fed leaves | Yes[ | NT | NT | NT | [ |
| Virus-like replicon particles | GPC, L, and NP (IbAr 10200 L, NP, and Oman-1998 GPC ) | IFNAR−/− | High dose (105 TCID50) (s.c.)[ | Yes[ | NT | 100 TCID50 recombinant CCHFV-IbAr 10200 (s.c.) day 32 | 100% | [ |
| DNA | GPC | BALB/c | 10 μg (g.g.) day 0, 28, 56, and 84[ | Yes[ | NT | NT | NT | [ |
| mRNA | NP | IFNα/βR−/− | 25 μg (i.m.)[ | Yes[ | Yes | 1000 TCID50 of Ank-2 strain (i.p.) day 42 | 50% | [ |
| MVA vector | GPC | IFNα/βR−/− | 107 pfu MVA-GP (i.m.) day 0 and 14 | Yes[ | Yes | 200 TCID50 CCHFV virus strain IbAr 10200 (i.d.) day 28 | 100% | [ |
All vaccine candidates were based on IbAr 10200 strain unless otherwise stated.
Vaccine dose, timing, and route of inoculation, i.d.; i.p.; i.m.; i.n.; s.c.; g.g.
CCHFV challenge strain, dose, route, and timing.
Neutralizing antibodies in vitro.
Antibody ability to neutralize in vitro not assessed.
Single-dose administered.
Mice immunized with 10 μg of CCHF DNA vaccine.
Mice immunized with 2.5 μg of each of Rift Valley fever virus, CCHF, Hantaan virus and tick-borne encephalitis virus DNA vaccine.
Non-neutralizing antibodies in vitro.
Antibody passive and T cell adoptive transfer experiment.
BoHV-4, bovine herpesvirus type 4; Crimean–Congo hemorrhagic fever; CCHFV, Crimean–Congo hemorrhagic fever virus; ffu, focus-forming units; g.g., gene gun; GPC, glycoprotein precursor; i.d., intradermal; ifu, infectious units; i.m., intramuscular; i.n., intranasal; i.p., intraperitoneal; IFU, infectious units; IS, transiently suppressed type 1 interferon system; L, RNA-dependent RNA polymerase; mRNA, messenger RNA; MVA, modified Vaccinia Ankara virus; NP, nucleoprotein; NT, not tested; pfu, plaque-forming unit; PPFU, pseudo plaque-forming unit; s.c., subcutaneous.