4.6 Article

Antibodies Elicited in Response to a Single Cycle Glycoprotein D Deletion Viral Vaccine Candidate Bind C1q and Activate Complement Mediated Neutralization and Cytolysis

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v13071284

Keywords

herpes simplex viruses; vaccines; complement; C1q; glycoprotein D; glycoprotein B; complement-dependent cytolysis; complement-dependent neutralization

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health, NIAID [R01 AI17321, AI134367, P30 AI124414]
  2. X-Vax Technologies
  3. NIGMS MSTP training grant [T32 AI007501, T32GM007288]
  4. Einstein-Montefiore CTSA training grant [TL1 TR002557]
  5. [T32 AI070117]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

New research suggests that the Delta gD-2 vaccine can induce polyfunctional responses and has a better effect in preventing HSV. This vaccine can induce mice to produce high titers of antibodies that can trigger cytotoxicity and phagocytosis, completely protecting mice from HSV infection.
Herpes simplex virus (HSV) prevention is a global health priority but, despite decades of research, there is no effective vaccine. Prior efforts focused on generating glycoprotein D (gD) neutralizing antibodies, but clinical trial outcomes were disappointing. The deletion of gD yields a single-cycle candidate vaccine ( increment gD-2) that elicits high titer polyantigenic non-gD antibodies that exhibit little complement-independent neutralization but mediate antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) and phagocytosis (ADCP). Active or passive immunization with Delta gD-2 completely protects mice from lethal disease and latency following challenge with clinical isolates of either serotype. The current studies evaluated the role of complement in vaccine-elicited protection. The immune serum from the Delta gD-2 vaccinated mice exhibited significantly greater C1q binding compared to the serum from the gD protein vaccinated mice with infected cell lysates from either serotype as capture antigens. The C1q-binding antibodies recognized glycoprotein B. This resulted in significantly greater antibody-mediated complement-dependent cytolysis and neutralization. Notably, complete protection was preserved when the Delta gD-2 immune serum was passively transferred into C1q knockout mice, suggesting that ADCC and ADCP are sufficient in mice. We speculate that the polyfunctional responses elicited by Delta gD-2 may prove more effective in preventing HSV, compared to the more restrictive responses elicited by adjuvanted gD protein vaccines.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available