| Literature DB >> 34975888 |
Basudev Paudyal1, Adam McNee1, Pramila Rijal2,3, B Veronica Carr1, Alejandro Nunez4, John McCauley5, Rodney S Daniels5, Alain R Townsend2,3, John A Hammond1, Elma Tchilian1.
Abstract
We have established the pig, a large natural host animal for influenza, with many physiological similarities to humans, as a robust model for testing the therapeutic potential of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). In this study we demonstrated that prophylactic intravenous administration of 15 mg/kg of porcine mAb pb18, against the K160-163 site of the hemagglutinin, significantly reduced lung pathology and nasal virus shedding and eliminated virus from the lung of pigs following H1N1pdm09 challenge. When given at 1 mg/kg, pb18 significantly reduced lung pathology and lung and BAL virus loads, but not nasal shedding. Similarly, when pb18 was given in combination with pb27, which recognized the K130 site, at 1 mg/kg each, lung virus load and pathology were reduced, although without an apparent additive or synergistic effect. No evidence for mAb driven virus evolution was detected. These data indicate that intravenous administration of high doses was required to reduce nasal virus shedding, although this was inconsistent and seldom complete. In contrast, the effect on lung pathology and lung virus load is consistent and is also seen at a one log lower dose, strongly indicating that a lower dose might be sufficient to reduce severity of disease, but for prevention of transmission other measures would be needed.Entities:
Keywords: influenza monoclonal antibody; monoclonal antibody therapy; mucosal immunity; pandemic H1N1 virus; swine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34975888 PMCID: PMC8716435 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.790918
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 2Lung pathology. pb18 was administered at 15 mg/kg, 1 mg/kg or simultaneously with pb27 at 1 mg/kg each to pigs which were challenged with H1N1pdm09 virus 24 h later. The control group animals were untreated. The animals were culled four days later and the lung scored for appearance of gross and histopathology lesions. The gross and histopathology scores for each individual in a group and the group means are shown (A, B) Representative gross pathology, histopathology (H&E staining; original magnification 100×), and immunohistochemical NP staining (original magnification 200×) for each group are shown (C) Bronchiole region is depicted as “B”. The histopathological Iowa scores include the NP staining. Pathology scores were analyzed using the one-way ANOVA with Bonferroni’s multiple comparison test. Asterisks denote significant differences **p <0.01, ***p <0.001 versus control.
Figure 1Experimental design and virus load. pb18 was administered at 15 mg/kg, 1 mg/kg or simultaneously with pb27 at 1 mg/kg each to pigs which were challenged with H1N1pdm09 virus 24 h later. The control animals were untreated. Nasal swabs (NS) were taken at 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 DPI, and the pigs were culled at 4 DPI (A). Virus load in daily nasal swabs (B) and over time (C), accessory lung and BAL at 4 DPI (D) were determined by plaque assay. Each data point represents an individual animal within the indicated group and the mean is shown as a horizontal line. The time course plots (C) show the mean (line) and standard error of mean (SEM) for each group of five pigs. Asterisks denote significant differences *p <0.05, **p <0.01, versus control as analyzed by Kruskal–Wallis test with Dunn’s multiple comparison test.
Figure 3Concentration and neutralization titers of mAbs in serum, BAL and nasal swabs. HA specific IgG in sera was assessed by ELISA at the indicated DPI and in BAL and nasal swabs (NS) at 4 DPI (A). The 50% neutralization titers against H1N1pdm09 in sera at the indicated timepoints and in BAL at 4 DPI are shown (B). The time course plots (serum) show the mean (line) and SEM (error bars) for each group of five pigs. The dot plots (BAL and NS) show the data for individual pigs with a group and the horizontal line shows the mean for the group. Data were analyzed using a Kruskal–Wallis test with Dunn’s multiple comparison test. Asterisks denote significant differences *p <0.05, **p <0.01, ***p <0.001 versus control.
Virus HA amino acid variation in viruses recovered from experimental animals.
| HA1 (HA2) amino acid position | 154* | 155* | 184 | 186* | 209* | 222* | (201) | Animal no | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Challenge stock amino acid | X (K65:E35) | X (G95:E5) | T | A | X (E60:K40) | G | V | ||
| 15 mg/kg pb18 group | K | G | T97:I7 | A30:T70 | E | 3190 | |||
| K | G | E | A | 3192 | |||||
| K | E | T | K | 3194# | |||||
| K | G | E | 3206 | ||||||
| 1 mg/kg pb18 group | K | G | E | 3195 | |||||
| K | G | E | 3196 | ||||||
| K | G | E | 3197 | ||||||
| K | G | E70:K30 | G92:V8 | 3199 | |||||
| 1 mg/kg each pb18 + pb27 group | K | G | E | G60:D40 | 3200 | ||||
| K | G | E | 3201 | ||||||
| no mAb (control) group | K | G | E91:K9 | 3205 | |||||
| K | G | E | 3207 | ||||||
| K | G | E | 3208 | ||||||
| K | G55:E45 | E55:K45 | 3209# | ||||||
| K | G85:E15 | E87:K13 | G94:D6 | 3191 | |||||
Complete HA gene sequences were recovered from 15 of the experimental animals and the A/swine/England/1353/2009 challenge virus stock. Only positions that differ from the challenge virus are indicated. *Residues where amino acid polymorphism was seen in at least one virus. #For these samples complete HA sequences were recovered by Sanger sequencing only; good quality chromatograms with single well-defined peaks and high signal to noise (baseline) ratios were obtained allowing us to distinguish minority variants in the traces at frequencies down to 5%, only those polymorphisms shown for the sample from animal 3209 were observed.