4.7 Article

Immune profile and responses of a novel dengue DNA vaccine encoding an EDIII-NS1 consensus design based on Indo-African sequences

Journal

MOLECULAR THERAPY
Volume 30, Issue 5, Pages 2058-2077

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2022.01.013

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Infosys [17X6777]
  2. National Centre for Biological Sciences, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (NCBS-TIFR) planned funds and Department of Biotechnology (DBT), India
  3. RGCB-Intramural grant
  4. TRCBIRAC [BT/NBM0099/02/18]
  5. JC Bose Fellowship from the Science and Engineering Research Board, India [SB/S2/JC-071/2015]
  6. Bioinformatics Centre Grant - Department of Biotechnology, India [BT/PR40187/BTIS/137/9/2021]

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The study developed a DNA vaccine candidate for dengue virus by combining different serotypes of envelope protein and non-structural protein 1. The vaccine induced neutralizing antibodies and antigen-specific T cell responses in mice, and passive transfer of immune sera provided protection. This alternative strategy for dengue vaccine design shows potential for broad-spectrum protection.
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic highlights the need to tackle viral variants, expand the number of antigens, and assess diverse delivery systems for vaccines against emerging viruses. In the present study, a DNA vaccine candidate was generated by combining in tandem envelope protein domain III (EDIII) of dengue virus serotypes 1-4 and a dengue virus (DENV)-2 non-structural protein 1 (NS1) protein-coding region. Each domain was designed as a serotype-specific consensus coding sequence derived from different genotypes based on the whole genome sequencing of clinical isolates in India and complemented with data from Africa. This sequence was further optimized for protein expression. In silico structural analysis of the EDIII consensus sequence revealed that epitopes are structurally conserved and immunogenic. The vaccination of mice with this construct induced pan-serotype neutralizing antibodies and antigen-specific T cell responses. Assaying intracellular interferon (IFN)-gamma staining, immunoglobulin IgG2(a/c)/IgG1 ratios, and immune gene profiling suggests a strong Th1-dominant immune response. Finally, the passive transfer of immune sera protected AG129 mice challenged with a virulent, non-mouse-adapted DENV-2 strain. Our findings collectively suggest an alternative strategy for dengue vaccine design by offering a novel vaccine candidate with a possible broadspectrum protection and a successful clinical translation either as a stand alone or in a mix and match strategy.

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