| Literature DB >> 32631318 |
Daniel Sepulveda-Crespo1, Salvador Resino2, Isidoro Martinez3.
Abstract
Despite the recent development of safe and highly effective direct-acting antivirals, hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection remains a significant health problem. In 2016, the World Health Organization set out to reduce the rate of new HCV infections by 90% by 2030. Still, global control of the virus does not seem to be achievable in the absence of an effective vaccine. Current approaches to the development of a vaccine against HCV include the production of recombinant proteins, synthetic peptides, DNA vaccines, virus-like particles, and viral vectors expressing various antigens. In this review, we focus on the development of vaccines targeting the humoral immune response against HCV based on the cumulative evidence supporting the important role of neutralizing antibodies in protection against HCV infection. The main targets of HCV-specific neutralizing antibodies are the glycoproteins E1 and E2. Recent advances in the knowledge of HCV glycoprotein structure and their epitopes, as well as the possibility of getting detailed information on the human antibody repertoire generated by the infection, will allow rational structure-based antigen design to target specific germline antibodies. Although obtaining a vaccine capable of inducing sterilizing immunity will be a difficult task, a vaccine that prevents chronic hepatitis C infections, a more realistic goal in the short term, would have a considerable health impact.Entities:
Keywords: Antibody; Glycoprotein E1; Glycoprotein E2; HCV; Humoral immune response; Vaccine; Virus neutralization
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32631318 PMCID: PMC7338099 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-020-00669-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 8.410
Summary of HCV vaccine candidates based on E1/E2 glycoproteins in preclinical or clinical trials
| Vaccine / HCV genotype | Target | Cross-genotype neutralization activity using HCVpp and/or HCVcc | Immunized species | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| rE2(Δ123) and rE2(Δ123A7) / HCV 1a (H77c) | E2 | 1a (H77), 2a (J6), 3a (S52), 5a (SA13) | Guinea pigs | [ |
| rHCV E1/E2 with admixed sulfated S-lactosylarchaeol (SLA) archaeosome formulation as adjuvant / HCV 1a (H77) | E1E2 | N/A | C57BL/6 x BALB/c F1 mice | [ |
| HCVp6-MAP. Six peptides (p6) in a multiple antigenic peptide (MAP) derived from conserved epitopes in E1 (1), E2 (2), NS4B (1), NS5A (1) and NS5B (1) / HCV 4a (ED43) | E1, E2, NS4b, NS5a, NS5b | 2a (JFH1) and a chimeric 2a/4a (ED43/JFH1) | BALB/c mice | [ |
| DNA vaccine encoding sE1E2 into IMX313P (oligomers by fusion with the oligomerization domain of the C4b-binding protein) or sE1 and sE2 as separate immunogens / HCV 1b (HCV-N) | E1, E2, E1E2 | 1a (H77.20, UKN1A20.8), 1b (ukn1b5.23), 2a (ukn2a1.2, a2.4), 2b (UKN2B1.1, B2.8), 3a (UKN3A1.28, A1.9, A13.6), 4a (UKN4.11.1, 4.21.16), 5 (UKN5.14.4), 6 (UKN6.5.8, 6.5.340) | BALB/c mice | [ |
| HCV-like particles bearing core, E1 and E2 from four genotypes / 1a (H77), 1b (BK), 2a (JFH1), and 3a | E1, E2, core | 1a (H77), 1b (BK), 2a (JFH1/J6, JFH1), 3a (HIC-109) | BALB/c mice White Landrace pigs | [ |
| Chimeric HBV/HCV virus‐like particles bearing three conservative linear epitopes from E1 and E2 and HVR1 mimotope / N/D | E1, E2 | 1a (JFH1/H77, H77C/JFH1), 1b (Hebei, J4/JFH1), 2a (JFH1/J6, JFH1) | BALB/c mice | [ |
| rE2(Δ123) / HCV 1a (H77c) | E2 | 1a (H77c), 2a (J6), 3a (S52), 4a (ED43), 5a (SA13), 6a (EUHK2), 7a (QC69) | Albino Dunkin Hartley guinea pigs | [ |
| rHCV E1/E2 with MF59C.1 as an adjuvant / HCV 1a | E1E2 | Genotype 1a/1b patients | Humans (Phase Ib) | [ |
Chimeric HBV/HCV virus‐like particles bearing E1 or E2 / HCV 1a (JFH1/H77) | E1, E2 | 1a (JFH1/H77; 7a), 1b (JFH1/J4; UKN5.23), 2a (JFH1 WT; UKN 2a1.2), 3 (JFH1/S52; UKN3A.1.28) | New Zealand rabbits | [ |
| rHCV E1E2 / HCV 1a (HCV-1) | E1E2 | 1a (H77), 2a (J6), 3a (S52), 4a (ED43), 5a (SA13), 6a (HK6a) | Chimpanzees | [ |
| HCV virus-like particles bearing E1E2 or E1 / HCV 1a (H77) | E1, E1E2 | 1a (H77), 1b (CG1b, CON1), 2a (JFH-1), 2b (UKN2B), 4c (UKN4) | Macaques ( Human CD46 ± IFNαβR-/- mice | [ |
| rHCV E1/E2 with MF59C.1 as an adjuvant (oil-in water emulsion) / HCV 1a | E1E2 | 1a (HCV-1, H77), 1b (UKN1B 12.6), 2a (J6), 3a (S52), 4a (UKN4.11.1), 5a (SA13) | C57BL/6J mice, macaques ( | [ |
| DNA vaccine expressing HCV Core, E1 and E2 / HCV 1b (CIGB-230) | E1, E2, core | N/A | Humans (Phase I) | [ |
| HCV virus‐like particles bearing core, E1, and E2 with AS01B as an adjuvant (a combination of monophosphoryl lipid A and QS21 saponin) / HCV 1b (CG1b) | E1, E2, core | N/A | Chimpanzees (Pan Troglodytes) | [ |
| rHCV E1 with aluminum hydroxide as an adjuvant / HCV 1b | E1 | N/A | Humans (Phase I) | [ |
| DNA vaccine expressing HCV E2 / HCV 1a | E2 | N/A | Chimpanzees (Pan Troglodytes) | [ |
Δ123: E2‐receptor‐binding domain lacking hypervariable region (HVR) 1 and 2, and the intergenotypic variable region (igVR) (384-408) or replaced with glutathione disulfide linkers (461-485 and570-580); Δ123A7: a disulfide-minimized version that contains seven cysteine to alanine mutations (A7: C452A, C486A, C569A, C581A, C585A, C597A, C652A); HCVcc: cell-cultured viruses; HCVpp: HCV pseudoparticles; N/A: Cross-reactive neutralizing antibodies not evaluated; N/D: Origin not indicated
Fig. 1Hepatitis C E1 and E2 glycoprotein structures. a Linear diagram of HCV E1 (aa192–383) and crystal structures of E1 segments aa192–271 (PDB: 4UOI) and aa314–324 (PDB: 4N0Y). b Linear diagram of HCV E2 (aa384–746) and ribbon representation of the E2 crystal structure (PDB: 4MWF). E2 is divided into the following structural components: three hypervariable regions (HVR1, HVR2 and igVR), a front layer, two β-sandwich regions, CD81 binding loop, a back layer followed by the stem region and transmembrane (TM) domain. The neutralizing face with epitopes I (orange), II (violet) and III (blue) is indicated. a-b N-linked glycosylation sites as tree-like representations and well-defined regions containing α-helices and β-sheets are shown in the linear diagram and X-ray crystallographic structure of both glycoproteins, respectively
Fig. 2E2 epitopes (I to III) adopt distinct conformations when complexed with different antibodies. a Conformations of epitope I: (Upper) Closed β-hairpin in complex with nAb HCV1 (PDB: 4DGY); (Middle) extended-coil conformation in complex with nAb 3/11 (PDB: 4WHY); and (Lower) intermediate-coil conformation with an anti-parallel β-sheet in complex with nAb HC33.1 (PDB:4XVJ). b Conformations of epitope II: (Upper) Preferred state of E2 in the viral particle containing a short 1.5-turn α-helix (aa437–442) and an extended conformation (aa443–446, not shown) in complex with nAb HC84.27 (PDB: 4JZO); and (Lower) conformational changes through short α-helix flipping out (‘open state’) to expose aa437(W) and aa438(L) residues for nAb mAb#8 (PDB: 4HZL). c Conformations of epitope III: (Upper) Open and stabilized strand in β-sheet conformation with aa537(F) and aa539(L) residues flipped out into the hydrophobic part of the Ig-like domain in complex with AR3C Fab (PDB: 4MWF); and (Lower) helical disordered conformation with aa537(F) and aa539(L) residues solvent-exposed in complex with non-nAb DAO5 (PDB: 5NPJ)
Fig. 3Summary of the key topics discussed in this review