Tscherne Alina, Kalodimou Georgia, Jany Sylvia, Freudenstein Astrid, Kumar Satendra, Pilchová Veronika, Friebis Theresa, Maiwald Gabriel, Panhofer Isabella, Sutter Gerd, Volz Asisa
Division of Virology, Department of Veterinary Sciences, Ludwig Maximilians University (LMU Munich), 85764 Oberschleißheim, Germany.
German Centre for Infection Research, Partner Site Munich, 85764 Oberschleißheim, Germany.
J Gen Virol. 2025 Sep;106(9). doi: 10.1099/jgv.0.002142.
Lassa virus (LASV) is circulating in rodents in several countries in West Africa and is the causative agent of the zoonotic disease Lassa fever. Several vaccine candidates have been successfully tested in preclinical and clinical research, while no LASV-specific vaccines or antiviral treatments have been licensed to date. Approximately 500,000 human cases of Lassa fever are estimated to occur every year. However, the high percentage (~80%) of asymptomatic cases and the low frequency of reporting systems in endemic regions demonstrate that Lassa fever cases are highly underreported. Given the frequent spread of the virus by travellers to non-endemic regions, the need for effective vaccines and treatments becomes clear. Here, we describe the generation and preclinical evaluation of two recombinant Lassa virus candidate vaccines, MVA-GP and MVA-NP, which are based on the highly attenuated modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) strain. Constructed in the MVA vector, the MVA-GP vaccine delivers the glycoprotein (GP) of the prototype LASV Josiah strain (lineage IV), whereas the MVA-NP vaccine expresses the nucleoprotein (NP) from the Lassa virus Togo strain (lineage VII). Two immunizations of either MVA-GP or MVA-NP induced substantial polyfunctional Lassa virus-specific CD8 and CD4 T cell responses, respectively, in humanized mice (HLA-A*0201/DR1 transgenic mice). The identified human Lassa virus-specific T cell epitopes were in agreement with recently discovered T cell epitopes found in Lassa fever survivors. Further studies are warranted to characterize these recombinant MVA-Lassa virus vaccine candidates in other preclinical models and investigate their potential to be characterized in clinical studies in humans.
拉沙病毒(LASV)在西非多个国家的啮齿动物中传播,是人畜共患疾病拉沙热的病原体。几种候选疫苗已在临床前和临床研究中成功进行了测试,但迄今为止,尚无经许可的针对拉沙病毒的疫苗或抗病毒治疗方法。据估计,每年约有50万例人类拉沙热病例发生。然而,无症状病例的高比例(约80%)以及流行地区报告系统的低频率表明,拉沙热病例的报告严重不足。鉴于病毒经常通过旅行者传播到非流行地区,对有效疫苗和治疗方法的需求变得显而易见。在这里,我们描述了两种重组拉沙病毒候选疫苗MVA-GP和MVA-NP的产生及临床前评估,它们基于高度减毒的安卡拉痘苗病毒(MVA)株构建。MVA-GP疫苗在MVA载体中构建,可递送原型拉沙病毒乔赛亚株(谱系IV)的糖蛋白(GP),而MVA-NP疫苗则表达来自拉沙病毒多哥株(谱系VII)的核蛋白(NP)。在人源化小鼠(HLA-A*0201/DR1转基因小鼠)中,分别对MVA-GP或MVA-NP进行两次免疫接种,可诱导大量多功能的拉沙病毒特异性CD8和CD4 T细胞反应。所鉴定的人类拉沙病毒特异性T细胞表位与最近在拉沙热幸存者中发现的T细胞表位一致。有必要进一步研究,以在其他临床前模型中对这些重组MVA-拉沙病毒候选疫苗进行特性鉴定,并研究它们在人类临床研究中的特性潜力。