| Literature DB >> 32508764 |
Casey C Perley1, Rebecca L Brocato1, Hua Wu2, Christoph Bausch2, Priya P Karmali3, Jerel B Vega3, Melanie V Cohen1, Brandon Somerville1, Steven A Kwilas1, Lucia M Principe1, Joshua Shamblin1, Padmanabh Chivukula3, Eddie Sullivan2, Jay W Hooper1.
Abstract
We explored an emerging technology to produce anti-Hantaan virus (HTNV) and anti-Puumala virus (PUUV) neutralizing antibodies for use as pre- or post-exposure prophylactics. The technology involves hyperimmunization of transchomosomic bovines (TcB) engineered to express human polyclonal IgG antibodies with HTNV and PUUV DNA vaccines encoding GnGc glycoproteins. For the anti-HTNV product, TcB was hyperimmunized with HTNV DNA plus adjuvant or HTNV DNA formulated using lipid nanoparticles (LNP). The LNP-formulated vaccine yielded fivefold higher neutralizing antibody titers using 10-fold less DNA. Human IgG purified from the LNP-formulated animal (SAB-159), had anti-HTNV neutralizing antibody titers >100,000. SAB-159 was capable of neutralizing pseudovirions with monoclonal antibody escape mutations in Gn and Gc demonstrating neutralization escape resistance. SAB-159 protected hamsters from HTNV infection when administered pre- or post-exposure, and limited HTNV infection in a marmoset model. An LNP-formulated PUUV DNA vaccine generated purified anti-PUUV IgG, SAB-159P, with a neutralizing antibody titer >600,000. As little as 0.33 mg/kg of SAB-159P protected hamsters against PUUV infection for pre-exposure and 10 mg/kg SAB-159P protected PUUV-infected hamsters post-exposure. These data demonstrate that DNA vaccines combined with the TcB-based manufacturing platform can be used to rapidly produce potent, human, polyclonal, escape-resistant anti-HTNV, and anti-PUUV neutralizing antibodies that are protective in animal models.Entities:
Keywords: HFRS; hamster; hantaan; hantavirus; marmoset; passive transfer; puumala; transchromosomic bovine
Year: 2020 PMID: 32508764 PMCID: PMC7252588 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.00832
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 3SAB-159 protects hamsters when administered prior to HTNV exposure. (A) Hamsters were administered 10 mg/kg SAB-159 subcutaneously and serum collected and analyzed by HTNV PsVNA. The results of two experiments are shown for hamsters that were either serially bled following SAB-159 administration (n = 6, closed symbols) or hamsters bled on the indicated day following SAB-159 administration (n = 8, open symbols). GMT ± SEM are plotted. (B) The data from (A) was used to calculate the half-life of 12.1 days based on PsVNA50 data (closed symbols used for calculation). (C) Characterization of the protective efficacy of SAB-159 against HTNV challenge was determined by N-ELISA when SAB-159 was administered in decreasing concentrations on Day -1 prior to HTNV challenge, (D) at 10 mg/kg at increasing timepoints prior to HTNV challenge, and (E) at 10 mg/kg with increasing concentrations of HTNV challenge doses. PsVNA50 titers (open circles) are shown for hamsters in (C–E). The shaded gray area represents the limit of detection for the PsVNA assay. N-ELISA log10 titers are displayed for individual hamsters, ≥2 is positive.
FIGURE 4SAB-159 limits HTNV infection in marmosets. (A) Experimental design. Two groups of 3 marmosets each were administered either 71,871 NAU/kg (12.23 mg/kg) SAB-159 or control human IgG on Day -1 prior to HTNV challenge. Sera collection dates are shown in gray arrows. Serum from indicated times was analyzed by (B) N-ELISA and (C) PsVNA. The shaded gray area represents the limit of detection for the PsVNA assay.
FIGURE 5Human IgG products protect hamsters from infection when administered post-exposure. (A) Hamsters were administered decreasing concentrations of SAB-159P on Day -1 prior to a 1,000 PFU PUUV challenge. Sera collected on Day 0 was analyzed by PUUV PsVNA (open circles) and Day 35 by N-ELISA (black bars). Characterization of the protective efficacy of (B) 10 mg/kg SAB-159 and (C) 10 mg/kg SAB-159P administered on indicated days post infection. For (B,C), sera was collected 1 day following passive transfer for analysis in PsVNA (open circles) and Day 35 for analysis in N-ELISA (black bars). (A–C) The shaded gray area represents the limit of detection for the PsVNA assay. N-ELISA log10 titers are displayed for individual hamsters, ≥2 is positive.
FIGURE 1Neutralizing antibody responses in TcB vaccinated with either HTNV or PUUV DNA vaccines. (A) TcB #2034 (black symbols) was vaccinated with unformulated HTNV DNA vaccine and a veterinary adjuvant at the times indicated by the black arrows, TcB #2026 (blue symbols) was vaccinated with a LMP-formulated HTNV DNA vaccine at the times indicated by the blue arrows, and TcB #2303 (red symbols) was vaccinated with a LNP-formulated PUUV DNA vaccine at the times indicated by the red arrows. Sera was collected from the TcB at the indicated timepoints and represents the geometric mean titer ± standard deviation of 2–5 independent assays (Days 14, 21, 56, and 84, all others represent data from a single assay). (B) SAB-159 and SAB-159P were evaluated for neutralizing (solid bars) and cross neutralizing (open bars) activity by PsVNA. (C) SAB-159 purified material stored at 4°C for the indicated number of days was evaluated by PRNT. Limit of quantitation is 20 (gray shaded area).
FIGURE 2SAB-159 neutralizes MAb escape mutants. Pseudovirions with wildtype GnGc, single MAb escape mutations, or a double escape mutation were used in PsVNA to determine the effect mutations have on the capacity of antibody to neutralize virion entry into cells. (A) Anti-HTNV MAb 3D5, MAb HCO2, and a 1:1 MAb cocktail of those antibodies were evaluated in the PsVNA. The IC50 were plotted. (B) The anti-HTNV purified human IgG (SAB-159) prediluted at 1:30 and control polyclonal antibodies were evaluated by PsVNA. The PsVNA50 titers were plotted. The positive control was anti-HTNV rabbit (rab) sera; the negative control was normal rabbit sera; and the negative control was purified IgG antibody from a naïve TcB (Negative IgG). *Indicates that the mutation(s) in the GnGc resulted in a >10-fold reduction in PsVNA50 titer (escape). Limit of quantitation is 20 (gray shaded area).
Calculation of estimated probabilities of protective immunity against HTNV infection based on protection data from Figure 3.
| 0.40 | 41 | 28 | 56 |
| 0.50 | 50 | 35 | 70 |
| 0.60 | 62 | 44 | 89 |
| 0.70 | 78 | 56 | 117 |
| 0.80 | 103 | 73 | 167 |
| 0.90 | 157 | 106 | 293 |