Weber Whitney C, Andoh Takeshi F, Kreklywich Craig N, Streblow Zachary J, Denton Michael, Streblow Magdalene M, Powers John M, Sulgey Gauthami, Medica Samuel, Dmitriev Igor, Curiel David T, Haese Nicole N, Streblow Daniel N
Vaccine and Gene Therapy Institute, Oregon Health and Science University, Beaverton, OR 97006, USA.
Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR 97239, USA.
Vaccines (Basel). 2024 Aug 27;12(9):970. doi: 10.3390/vaccines12090970.
Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a pathogenic arthritogenic alphavirus responsible for large-scale human epidemics for which a vaccine was recently approved for use. Mayaro virus (MAYV) is a related emerging alphavirus with epidemic potential with circulation overlap potential with CHIKV. We previously reported the ability of a non-replicating human adenovirus (AdV)-vectored vaccine expressing the MAYV structural polyprotein to protect against disease in mice following challenge with MAYV, CHIKV and UNAV. Herein, we evaluated mouse immunity and protective efficacy for an AdV-CHIKV full structural polyprotein vaccine in combination with heterologous AdV-MAYV prime/boost regimens versus vaccine coadministration. Heterologous prime/boost regimens skewed immunity toward the prime vaccine antigen but allowed for a boost of cross-neutralizing antibodies, while vaccine co-administration elicited robust, balanced responses capable of boosting. All immunization strategies protected against disease from homologous virus infection, but reciprocal protective immunity differences were revealed upon challenge with heterologous viruses. In vivo passive transfer experiments reproduced the inequity in reciprocal cross-protection after heterologous MAYV challenge. We detected in vitro antibody-dependent enhancement of MAYV replication, suggesting a potential mechanism for the lack of cross-protection. Our findings provide important insights into rational alphavirus vaccine design that may have important implications for the evolving alphavirus vaccine landscape.
基孔肯雅病毒(CHIKV)是一种致病性致关节炎甲病毒,可引发大规模人类疫情,最近有一种针对该病毒的疫苗已获批使用。马亚罗病毒(MAYV)是一种相关的新兴甲病毒,具有流行潜力,且与基孔肯雅病毒存在传播重叠的可能性。我们之前报道了一种表达马亚罗病毒结构多聚蛋白的非复制型人腺病毒(AdV)载体疫苗,在小鼠受到马亚罗病毒、基孔肯雅病毒和乌纳瓦图纳病毒攻击后能够保护其免受疾病侵害。在此,我们评估了腺病毒 - 基孔肯雅病毒全结构多聚蛋白疫苗与异源腺病毒 - 马亚罗病毒初免/加强免疫方案联合使用相对于疫苗共同给药的小鼠免疫和保护效果。异源初免/加强免疫方案使免疫偏向初免疫苗抗原,但能增强交叉中和抗体,而疫苗共同给药则引发了强大、平衡且能够增强的反应。所有免疫策略都能保护小鼠免受同源病毒感染,但在用异源病毒攻击后发现了相互保护免疫的差异。体内被动转移实验重现了异源马亚罗病毒攻击后交叉保护的不平等现象。我们在体外检测到马亚罗病毒复制的抗体依赖性增强,这表明了缺乏交叉保护的潜在机制。我们的研究结果为合理的甲病毒疫苗设计提供了重要见解,这可能对不断发展的甲病毒疫苗格局具有重要意义。