Paul Lauren M, Carlin Eric R, Jenkins Meagan M, Tan Amanda L, Barcellona Carolyn M, Nicholson Cindo O, Michael Scott F, Isern Sharon
Department of Biological Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences, Florida Gulf Coast University , Fort Myers, FL, USA.
Clin Transl Immunology. 2016 Dec 16;5(12):e117. doi: 10.1038/cti.2016.72. eCollection 2016 Dec.
For decades, human infections with Zika virus (ZIKV), a mosquito-transmitted flavivirus, were sporadic, associated with mild disease, and went underreported since symptoms were similar to other acute febrile diseases. Recent reports of severe disease associated with ZIKV have greatly heightened awareness. It is anticipated that ZIKV will continue to spread in the Americas and globally where competent mosquito vectors are found. Dengue virus (DENV), the most common mosquito-transmitted human flavivirus, is both well-established and the source of outbreaks in areas of recent ZIKV introduction. DENV and ZIKV are closely related, resulting in substantial antigenic overlap. Through antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE), anti-DENV antibodies can enhance the infectivity of DENV for certain classes of immune cells, causing increased viral production that correlates with severe disease outcomes. Similarly, ZIKV has been shown to undergo ADE in response to antibodies generated by other flaviviruses. We tested the neutralizing and enhancing potential of well-characterized broadly neutralizing human anti-DENV monoclonal antibodies (HMAbs) and human DENV immune sera against ZIKV using neutralization and ADE assays. We show that anti-DENV HMAbs, cross-react, do not neutralize, and greatly enhance ZIKV infection . DENV immune sera had varying degrees of neutralization against ZIKV and similarly enhanced ZIKV infection. Our results suggest that pre-existing DENV immunity may enhance ZIKV infection and may lead to increased disease severity. Understanding the interplay between ZIKV and DENV will be critical in informing public health responses and will be particularly valuable for ZIKV and DENV vaccine design and implementation strategies.
几十年来,人类感染寨卡病毒(ZIKV)(一种通过蚊子传播的黄病毒)的情况一直很零星,与轻症疾病相关,且由于症状与其他急性发热疾病相似而报告不足。最近有关寨卡病毒相关严重疾病的报告极大地提高了人们的认识。预计寨卡病毒将继续在美洲以及有合适蚊子传播媒介的全球其他地区传播。登革病毒(DENV)是最常见的通过蚊子传播的人类黄病毒,在最近寨卡病毒传入的地区已广泛存在且是疫情爆发的源头。登革病毒和寨卡病毒密切相关,导致大量抗原重叠。通过抗体依赖性增强(ADE),抗登革病毒抗体可增强登革病毒对某些免疫细胞类别的感染性,导致病毒产生增加,这与严重疾病结果相关。同样,寨卡病毒已被证明会因其他黄病毒产生的抗体而发生ADE。我们使用中和试验和ADE试验,测试了特征明确的广谱中和人类抗登革病毒单克隆抗体(HMAbs)和人类登革病毒免疫血清对寨卡病毒的中和及增强潜力。我们发现,抗登革病毒HMAbs会发生交叉反应,不能中和寨卡病毒,反而会大大增强寨卡病毒感染。登革病毒免疫血清对寨卡病毒有不同程度的中和作用,同样也会增强寨卡病毒感染。我们的结果表明,先前存在的登革病毒免疫力可能会增强寨卡病毒感染,并可能导致疾病严重程度增加。了解寨卡病毒和登革病毒之间的相互作用对于指导公共卫生应对至关重要,对于寨卡病毒和登革病毒疫苗设计及实施策略也将特别有价值。