A chikungunya fever vaccine utilizing an insect-specific virus platform.
Jesse H ErasmusAlbert J AugusteJason T KaelberHuanle LuoShannan L RossiKarla FentonGrace LealDal Y KimWah ChiuTian WangIlya FrolovFarooq NasarScott C WeaverPublished in: Nature medicine (2016)
Traditionally, vaccine development involves tradeoffs between immunogenicity and safety. Live-attenuated vaccines typically offer rapid and durable immunity but have reduced safety when compared to inactivated vaccines. In contrast, the inability of inactivated vaccines to replicate enhances safety at the expense of immunogenicity, often necessitating multiple doses and boosters. To overcome these tradeoffs, we developed the insect-specific alphavirus, Eilat virus (EILV), as a vaccine platform. To address the chikungunya fever (CHIKF) pandemic, we used an EILV cDNA clone to design a chimeric virus containing the chikungunya virus (CHIKV) structural proteins. The recombinant EILV/CHIKV was structurally identical at 10 Å to wild-type CHIKV, as determined by single-particle cryo-electron microscopy, and it mimicked the early stages of CHIKV replication in vertebrate cells from attachment and entry to viral RNA delivery. Yet the recombinant virus remained completely defective for productive replication, providing a high degree of safety. A single dose of EILV/CHIKV produced in mosquito cells elicited rapid (within 4 d) and long-lasting (>290 d) neutralizing antibodies that provided complete protection in two different mouse models. In nonhuman primates, EILV/CHIKV elicited rapid and robust immunity that protected against viremia and telemetrically monitored fever. Our EILV platform represents the first structurally native application of an insect-specific virus in preclinical vaccine development and highlights the potential application of such viruses in vaccinology.
Keyphrases
- pi k akt
- signaling pathway
- aedes aegypti
- cell proliferation
- dengue virus
- zika virus
- electron microscopy
- sars cov
- high throughput
- magnetic resonance
- mouse model
- stem cells
- magnetic resonance imaging
- wild type
- coronavirus disease
- cell therapy
- bone marrow
- high resolution
- risk assessment
- climate change
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- human health
- genetic diversity
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- quantum dots