Department of Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.
Viruses. 2011 Dec;3(12):2374-95. doi: 10.3390/v3122374. Epub 2011 Nov 25.
Dengue viruses (DENV) are the causative agents of dengue fever (DF) and dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF). Here we review the current state of knowledge about the human antibody response to dengue and identify important knowledge gaps. A large body of work has demonstrated that antibodies can neutralize or enhance DENV infection. Investigators have mainly used mouse monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) to study interactions between DENV and antibodies. These studies indicate that antibody neutralization of DENVs is a "multi-hit" phenomenon that requires the binding of multiple antibodies to neutralize a virion. The most potently neutralizing mouse MAbs bind to surface exposed epitopes on domain III of the dengue envelope (E) protein. One challenge facing the dengue field now is to extend these studies with mouse MAbs to better understand the human antibody response. The human antibody response is complex as it involves a polyclonal response to primary and secondary infections with 4 different DENV serotypes. Here we review studies conducted with immune sera and MAbs isolated from people exposed to dengue infections. Most dengue-specific antibodies in human immune sera are weakly neutralizing and bind to multiple DENV serotypes. The human antibodies that potently and type specifically neutralize DENV represent a small fraction of the total DENV-specific antibody response. Moreover, these neutralizing antibodies appear to bind to novel epitopes including complex, quaternary epitopes that are only preserved on the intact virion. These studies establish that human and mouse antibodies recognize distinct epitopes on the dengue virion. The leading theory proposed to explain the increased risk of severe disease in secondary cases is antibody dependent enhancement (ADE), which postulates that weakly neutralizing antibodies from the first infection bind to the second serotype and enhance infection of FcγR bearing myeloid cells such as monocytes and macrophages. Here we review results from human, animal and cell culture studies relevant to the ADE hypothesis. By understanding how human antibodies neutralize or enhance DENV, it will be possible to better evaluate existing vaccines and develop the next generation of novel vaccines.
登革热病毒(DENV)是登革热(DF)和登革出血热(DHF)的病原体。在这里,我们回顾了人类对登革热的抗体反应的现有知识状态,并确定了重要的知识空白。大量的工作已经证明,抗体可以中和或增强 DENV 的感染。研究人员主要使用小鼠单克隆抗体(MAb)来研究 DENV 与抗体之间的相互作用。这些研究表明,DENV 的抗体中和是一种“多击”现象,需要多种抗体结合才能中和一个病毒粒子。最有效的中和性小鼠 MAb 结合到登革热包膜(E)蛋白结构域 III 上的表面暴露表位。登革热领域现在面临的一个挑战是将这些使用小鼠 MAb 的研究扩展到更好地理解人类抗体反应。人类的抗体反应是复杂的,因为它涉及到对 4 种不同的 DENV 血清型的初次和二次感染的多克隆反应。在这里,我们回顾了用接触过登革热感染的人的免疫血清和 MAb 进行的研究。在人免疫血清中,大多数登革热特异性抗体的中和能力较弱,并且可以与多种 DENV 血清型结合。能够强烈且特异性地中和 DENV 的人类抗体代表了总登革热特异性抗体反应的一小部分。此外,这些中和抗体似乎结合到新的表位,包括仅在完整病毒粒子上保存的复杂、四级表位。这些研究确立了人和小鼠抗体识别登革热病毒粒子上的不同表位。提出的解释二次感染中严重疾病风险增加的主要理论是抗体依赖性增强(ADE),该理论假定初次感染中的弱中和抗体与第二种血清型结合,并增强 FcγR 携带的髓样细胞(如单核细胞和巨噬细胞)的感染。在这里,我们回顾了与 ADE 假设相关的人类、动物和细胞培养研究的结果。通过了解人类抗体如何中和或增强 DENV,可以更好地评估现有的疫苗并开发下一代新型疫苗。