| Literature DB >> 33182447 |
Amira D Rghei1, Laura P van Lieshout1, Lisa A Santry1, Matthew M Guilleman1, Sylvia P Thomas1, Leonardo Susta1, Khalil Karimi1, Byram W Bridle1, Sarah K Wootton1.
Abstract
Filoviruses are among the deadliest infectious agents known to man, causing severe hemorrhagic fever, with up to 90% fatality rates. The 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa resulted in over 28,000 infections, demonstrating the large-scale human health and economic impact generated by filoviruses. Zaire ebolavirus is responsible for the greatest number of deaths to date and consequently there is now an approved vaccine, Ervebo, while other filovirus species have similar epidemic potential and remain without effective vaccines. Recent clinical success of REGN-EB3 and mAb-114 monoclonal antibody (mAb)-based therapies supports further investigation of this treatment approach for other filoviruses. While efficacious, protection from passive mAb therapies is short-lived, requiring repeat dosing to maintain therapeutic concentrations. An alternative strategy is vectored immunoprophylaxis (VIP), which utilizes an adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector to generate sustained expression of selected mAbs directly in vivo. This approach takes advantage of validated mAb development and enables vectorization of the top candidates to provide long-term immunity. In this review, we summarize the history of filovirus outbreaks, mAb-based therapeutics, and highlight promising AAV vectorized approaches to providing immunity against filoviruses where vaccines are not yet available.Entities:
Keywords: adeno-associated virus vector; filoviruses; monoclonal antibodies; vector biology; vectored-immunoprophylaxis (VIP); viral hemorrhagic fever; zoonotic diseases
Year: 2020 PMID: 33182447 PMCID: PMC7709665 DOI: 10.3390/tropicalmed5040169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Med Infect Dis ISSN: 2414-6366
Top performing mAbs for MARV from human survivors.
| Antibody and Source | Target | Competes with | Cross-Binds | Cross Neutralizes | Protection | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MR72 | Human IgG1; Survivor from 2014 MARV outbreak in Uganda | Receptor-binding site (RBS) near the hydrophobic trough and the apex of GP1 | MR78, MR82, MR191 | MARV (all strains), EBOV GP | MARV (Uganda), RAVV | 100% protective in mice (n = 5) against MARV (Uganda) in mice | [ |
| M78 | Human IgG1; Survivor from 2014 MARV outbreak in Uganda | Binds to the top and side of GP1 at a shallow angle relative to the central three-fold axis | MR72, MR82, MR191 | MARV (Uganda) and RAVV | MARV (Uganda and Ravn), potentially neutralizes EBOV entry by inhibiting viral membrane fusion downstream from virus receptor recognition | 100% protective in guinea pigs against MARV (Angola) and 100% against RAVV | [ |
| MR82 | Human IgG1; Survivor from 2014 MARV outbreak in Uganda | Binds toward the top and side of GP1 at a shallow angle relative to the central three-fold axis | MR72, MR78, MR191 | MARV (all strains) | MARV (all strains) | 40% protective in guinea pigs; however, it was 100% effective in mice | [ |
| MR191 | Human IgG1; Survivor from 2014 MARV outbreak in Uganda | RBS near the hydrophobic trough and the apex of GP1 | MR72, MR78, | MARV (Muskoke and Angola), RAVV, EBOV GP (does not neutralize) | MARV (Angola and Muskoke) | 100% protective against MARV (Angola) and RAVV in guinea pigs. 100% effective in NHPs when treated on day 4 and 7 post infection (MARV Angola). 80% protective on days 5 and 8 post infection of RAVV. Did not protect against GPA-SUDV in guinea pig models 3 dpi | [ |
Top performing pan-Ebola mAbs from human survivors.
| Antibody and Source | Target | Competes with | Cross-Binds | Cross Neutralizes | Protection | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CA45 | Macaque; Immunized macaque against EBOV, SUDV and MARV GPs | Conserved epitope in the internal fusion loop. Binds to the native GP but binds with way higher potency to the cleaved GP. Does not bind soluble GP (sGP) | KZ52, 2G4 and 4G7 | EBOV, SUDV and BDBV (does not bind MARV, Tai Forest or LLOV) | Potently neutralizes EBOV, SUDV, and BDBV and moderately neutralizes Reston. IC50 for EBOV and cleaved core ectodomain of EBOV (EBOV GPcl) was 4.63 and 0.05 nM, BDBV and GPcl was 4.24 and 0.007 nM, and SUDV and GPcl was 9.16 and 0.05 nM | In mice (n = 20), protection was as good as against EBOV and 80% against SUDV. In guinea pigs (n = 6) it was 100% protective against EBOV and SUDV. 100% protection in ferret model (n = 4) of BDBV. FVM04 + CA45 in mice against SUDV was 100% effective, mirrored in guinea pigs for EBOV | [ |
| BDBV223 | Human IgG3; Human survivor of 2007 Uganda BDBV outbreak | GP2 stalk (canonical heptad repeat 2 (HR2) domain near the MPER) (71% conserved amongst the five first Ebolaviruses, and 90% conserved amongst EBOV, BDBV, and SUDV), does not recognize BDBV sGP | BDBV317, BDBV340 | rVSV-GP of EBOV, BDBV, and SUDV | rVSV-GP of EBOV, BDBV, and SUDV | 100% in mice (n = 5), post-exposure (1 day) was 20% protection against lethal EBOV (Mayinga) challenge in guinea pigs (n = 5) and 50% effective in ferret models (n = 4), 3- and 6-days post-challenge | [ |
| FVM04 | Cloned as human IgG1 with kappa light chain; Macaque vaccinated with EBOV, SUDV, and MARV GP | The exposed tip of the receptor binding domain crest at the apex of the GP trimer and blocks interaction of GP with NPC1 in the late endosome. Glycans may moderately interfere with optimal binding. The RBD crest is highly conserved | M13C6, partially KZ52 | EBOV, SUDV, and BDBV (Binds WT, cleaved and sGP of all Ebola species), low affinity binding to MARV and Reston | EBOV and SUDV but not really BDBV or MARV. It is a weaker neutralization than some others: EC50 of 4.3 and 4.3 ug/mL for SUDV and EBOV | 100% in mice against EBOV and 75% in mice against SUDV. 100% protective in guinea pigs against SUDV and 40% protective against EBOV | [ |
| ADI-15742 | Human IgG; Human survivor of 2014 West Africa outbreak | A highly conserved region of GP2 within the internal fusion loop. Locks the GP into a pre-fusion state whether free or bound to NPC1. Does not bind sGP | ADI-15878, 100, KZ52, CA45 | Everything but MARV/LLOV (rVSV-GP for each Ebolavirus and Marburgvirus) | Potently neutralizes all five Ebola virus with IC50 of <2 nM for rVSV pseudotypes | 100% protection in lethal mouse model (100 μg against 100 pfu MA-EBOV) | [ |
| ADI-15878 | Human IgG; Human survivor of 2014 West Africa outbreak | A highly conserved region of GP2 within the internal fusion loop. Locks the GP into a pre-fusion state whether free or bound to NPC1. Does not bind sGP. Seems to target a cleaved intermediate in endosomes while first generation base binders act further upstream | 100, KZ52, CA45 | Everything but MARV/LLOV | Potently neutralizes all five Ebola virus with IC50 of <2 nM for rVSV pseudotypes | 80% protective in mice (n = 10) against EBOV and 100% protective in mice (n = 20) against SUDV. 75% protective against BDBV in ferrets (n = 4) | [ |
| ADI-23374 | Derived from affinity maturation of a human mAb (Human survivor of 2014 West Africa outbreak ADI-15946) using yeast resulting in enhanced potency against SUDV. | ADI-15946 binds a highly conserved epitope shielded by the mobile β17–β18 loop of the glycan cap, which is where ADI-23774 binds, does not bind sGP of EBOV | EBOV, BDBV, SUDV | EBOV, BDBV, SUDV | rVSV-SUDV GP | 90% protective against EBOV in mice (n = 10) 3 days post exposure and was 100% protective against wt-SUDV in mice (IFNR-/- mice) (n = 10) at 1- and 4-days post exposure | [ |
* They appear to bind the exact same location, although ADI-15878 engenders viral neutralization escape to a lesser extent than ADI-15742.
Figure 1Schematic representation of adeno-associated virus vectored-immunoprophylaxis (AAV VIP) against Ebolavirus. Ebolavirus infects a healthy patient causing the onset of Ebola hemorrhagic fever (EHF) (1). B cells are isolated from the blood of an Ebola virus disease (EVD) survivor (2). Potent antibodies are isolated for further development and characterization (3). Variable-heavy and variable-light chains of selected mAbs are cloned into the AAV vector (4). AAV vectors expressing the potent mAb against ebolavirus are manufactured (5). Individuals susceptible to ebolavirus infection are intramuscularly administered AAV-mAb vector (6). mAbs are secreted from the AAV-mAb transduced muscle cells into the blood stream and circulate throughout the blood, protecting against ebolavirus infection (7).