Antibody Response to Spike Protein Vaccines Prepared from Semliki Forest Virus (original) (raw)

Induction of protective immunity in animals vaccinated with recombinant vaccinia viruses that express PreM and E glycoproteins of Japanese encephalitis virus

Journal of Virology, 1990

A cDNA clone representing the genome of structural proteins of Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) was inserted into the thymidine kinase gene of vaccinia virus strains LC16mO and WR under the control of a strong early-late promoter for the vaccinia virus 7.5-kilodalton polypeptide. Indirect immunofluorescence and fluorescence-activated flow cytometric analysis revealed that the recombinant vaccinia viruses expressed JEV E protein on the membrane surface, as well as in the cytoplasm, of recombinant-infected cells. In addition, the E protein expressed from the JEV recombinants reacted to nine different characteristic monoclonal antibodies, some of which have hemagglutination-inhibiting and JEV-neutralizing activities. Radioimmunoprecipitation analysis demonstrated that two major proteins expressed in recombinant-infected cells were processed and glycosylated as the authentic PreM and E glycoproteins of JEV. Inoculation of rabbits with the infectious recombinant vaccinia virus resulted ...

Neutralizing and Non-neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies to the E2 Glycoprotein of Semliki Forest Virus Can Protect Mice from Lethal Encephalitis

Journal of General Virology, 1983

Background: Antibodies produced in response to infection with any of the four serotypes of dengue virus generally provide homotypic immunity. However, prior infection or circulating maternal antibodies can also mediate a non-protective antibody response that can enhance the course of disease in a subsequent heterotypic infection. Naturally occurring human monoclonal antibodies can help us understand the protective and pathogenic roles of the humoral immune system in dengue virus infection. Results: Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) transformation of B cells isolated from the peripheral blood of a human subject with previous dengue infection was performed. B cell cultures were screened by ELISA for antibodies to dengue (DENV) envelope (E) protein. ELISA positive cultures were cloned by limiting dilution. Three IgG1 human monoclonal antibodies (HMAbs) were purified and their binding specificity to E protein was verified by ELISA and biolayer interferometry. Neutralization and enhancement assays were conducted in epithelial and macrophage-like cell lines, respectively. All three HMAbs bound to E from at least two of the four DENV serotypes, one of the HMAbs was neutralizing, and all were able to enhance DENV infection. Conclusions: HMAbs against DENV can be successfully generated by EBV transformation of B cells from patients at least two years after naturally acquired DENV infections. These antibodies show different patterns of cross-reactivity, neutralizing, and enhancement activity.

Identification of linear epitopes on Semliki Forest virus E2 membrane protein and their effectiveness as a synthetic peptide vaccine

Journal of General Virology, 1991

Semliki Forest virus (SFV) infection of mice was used as a model to study the applicability of synthetic peptides containing only linear epitopes as viral vaccines. The identification of linear epitopes with vaccine potential on the E2 membrane protein of SFV was based on the binding of SFV-specific antibodies to a set of overlapping synthetic hexapeptides (Pepscan) representing the whole E2 amino acid sequence. The 14 available E2-specific monoclonal antibodies which were protective in vivo proved to be unsuitable for the identification of linear epitopes because they recognized only conformational epitopes, as indicated by their lack of reactivity with unfolded, reduced E2 protein on immunoblots. Three epitopes were detected with polyclonal anti-SFV serum at amino acid posi-tions 135 to 141,177 to 185 and 240 to 246 of the E2 protein. Synthetic peptides containing these epitopes were coupled to a carrier protein and tested as a vaccine. Mice immunized with the peptide containing amino acids 240 to 255 of protein E2 were protected against a challenge with virulent SFV but protection of mice immunized with the peptides containing amino acids 126 to 141 or 178 to 186 was only marginally better than that of controls. The prechallenge sera of most peptide-immunized mice reacted with SFVinfected cells but none of these sera neutralized the virus in vitro. However, protection of mice correlated well with SFV-specific antibody titre, suggesting antibody-mediated protection.

Influence of epitope polarity and adjuvants on the immunogenicity and efficacy of a synthetic peptide vaccine against Semliki Forest virus

Journal of virology, 1993

The antibody response to a previously defined B-cell epitope of Semliki Forest virus (SFV) was investigated in male BALB/c (H-2d) mice. The B-cell epitope, located at amino acid positions 240 to 255 of the E2 protein, was linked to an H-2d-restricted T-helper cell epitope of SFV located at positions 137 to 151 of the E2 protein. Colinearly synthesized peptides, of either T-B or B-T polarity, mixed with different adjuvants (the nonionic block copolymer L 180.5, a water-oil-water [W/O/W] emulsion of L 180.5, Montanide, and Q VAC) were used for immunization. Generally, after one booster immunization, high serum antibody titers were measured against either peptide. With Q VAC and W/O/W L 180.5 as adjuvants, the titers of SFV-reactive (nonneutralizing) antibodies were consistently much higher after immunization with the T-B peptide than with the B-T peptide, which was reflected in a higher vaccine efficacy. With these two adjuvants, the survival ratio in T-B peptide-immunized mice was 82...

Comparison of protective immunity elicited by recombinant vaccinia viruses that synthesize E or NS1 of Japanese encephalitis virus

Virology, 1991

Immunization with recombinant vaccinia viruses that specified the synthesis of Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) glycoproteins protected mice from a lethal intraperitoneal challenge with JEV. Recombinants which coexpressed the genes for the structural glycoproteins, prM and E, elicited high levels of neutralizing (NEUT) and hemagglutination inhibiting (HAI) antibodies in mice and protected mice from a lethal challenge by JEV. Recombinants expressing only the gene for the nonstructural glycoprotein, NS1, induced antibodies to NS1 but provided low levels of protection from a similar challenge dose of JEV. Antibodies to the NS3 protein in postchallenge sera, representing the degree of infection with challenge virus, were inversely correlated to NEUT and HAI titers and levels of protection. These results indicate that although vaccinia recombinants expressing NS1 can provide some protection from lethal JEV infection, recombinants expressing prM and E elicited higher levels of protective...

Epitope polarity and adjuvants influence the fine specificity of the humoral response against Semliki Forest virus specific peptide vaccines

Vaccine, 1998

The humoral response to synthetic peptide vaccines against Semliki Forest virus (SFV) in H-2d BALB/c mice was investigated with the enzyme linked immunosorbent assay and the pepscan technique. The peptide vaccines consisted of amino acid sequences 240-255 (B) and 137-151 (T) of the E2 membrane protein of SFV colinearly synthesized in either orientation T-B or B-T. Sequence B contains an epitope inducing humoral immunity to lethal SFV infection and sequence T contains a H-2d restricted T-helper cell epitope. With sera from mice immunized subcutaneously with peptide T-B, and Quil A as adjuvant, two immunodominant B-cell epitopes were identified, FVPRAD, at position 240-246 and PHYGKEI, at position 145-151. However, with peptide B-T and Quil A as adjuvant for immunization the epitope PHYGKEI was clearly immunodominant, but antibodies elicited against this epitope were not reactive with SFV-infected L cells in contrast to the antibodies elicited by epitope FVPRAD. An additional epitope ...

Immunogenicity and protective effcacy of the E. coli-expressed domain III of Japanese encephalitis virus envelope protein in mice

Original Research, 2007

Domain III of Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) envelope protein (E-DIII) was synthesized in E. coli as a fusion protein containing maltose-binding protein (MBP-E-DIII) or six contiguous histidine residues (His-E-DIII) at its N-terminus. MBP-E-DIII was found both in the soluble as well as the insoluble fraction of the bacterial lysate, while His-E-DIII was found exclusively in the inclusion bodies. These puriWed proteins were examined in mice for their immunogenicity in presence of an aluminium hydroxide based-adjuvant Alhydrogel and Freund's adjuvant. While both proteins generated anti-JEV antibodies that neutralized JEV activity in vitro, His-E-DIII generated higher antibody titers than MBP-E-DIII. Mice immunized with His-E-DIII in presence of Alhydrogel generated antibody titers similar to those induced by the commercial vaccine and protected mice against lethal JEV challenge.

Protection of mice against Japanese encephalitis virus by passive administration with monoclonal antibodies

Journal of Immunology, 1988

We have identified and characterized nine antigenic epitopes on the E envelope of Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) by using mAb. Passive administration of most of the anti-JEV mAb protected mice from i.v. challenge with 1.5 x lo3 plaque-formin$ units of JEV, JaGAr-01 strain. Some mAb, which possess high neutralization activity in vitro, showed high protection, and JEV-specific N mAb 503 was found the most protective. Even an injection of 2.5 &mouse of mAb 503 protected all mice from JEV infection. Furthermore, an injection of about 200 pg of mAb 503 on day 5 postinfection protected 82% of the mice, even when JEV was detected in more than 85% of the infected mouse brains. Synergism of protection was observed with mixtures of several mAb directed against different epitopes. Although in a murine macrophage cell line, all of the mAb groups showed antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) of JEV infectivity in vitro, and only two flavivirus cross-reactive mAb groups showed ADE of dengue virus type 2. The ADE of JEV by mAb seems not to be harmful for in vivo protection experiments, except for two mAb groups: mAb 302 and 201 showed little or no protective activity against JEV infection and, rather, caused early death in infected mice.

Immunogenicity and vaccine efficacy of synthetic peptides containing Semliki Forest virus B and T cell epitopes

Journal of General Virology, 1992

A synthetic peptide that contains a Semliki Forest virus (SFV) B cell epitope, located at amino acid positions 240 to 255 of the E2 protein, and an SFV T helper (Th) cell epitope, located at positions 137 to 151 of the E2 protein, evoked high titres of SFV-reactive antibodies in H-2 d mice. Although the peptide-induced antibodies did not neutralize SFV in vitro, 70 to 100% of the peptide-immunized mice were protected against SFV, even when viral challenge was presented 4 months after immunization. The protection could be transferred by anti-peptide serum, indicating that antibodies were responsible for the protection. When the Th cell epitope of this protective peptide was replaced by an influenza virus Th cell epitope or by another SFV Th cell epitope, the resulting peptides induced lower non-neutralizing SFV-reactive antibody titres and protected a correspondingly lower percentage of mice (50% and 30%, respectively). A peptide with the same Th cell epitope as the best protective peptide but with a less effective SFV B cell epitope protected only 33% of the mice. These results indicate that protection against SFV by a synthetic peptide is primarily dependent on its ability to induce adequate amounts of antibodies with relevant specificity and sufficient affinity; the ability to induce a relevant (SFV-specific) T memory response played only a minor role in protection.

A Novel Recombinant Virus-Like Particles Displaying B and T Cell Epitopes of Japanese Encephalitis Virus Offers Protective Immunity in Mice and Guinea Pigs

Vaccines

Virus-like particles (VLPs) are non-replicative vectors for the delivery of heterologous epitopes and are considered one of the most potent inducers of cellular and humoral immune responses in mice and guinea pigs. In the present study, VLP-JEVe was constructed by the insertion of six Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) envelope protein epitopes into different surface loop regions of PPV VP2 by the substitution of specific amino acid sequences without altering the assembly of the virus; subsequently, the protective efficacy of this VLP-JEVe was evaluated against JEV challenge in mice and guinea pigs. Mice immunized with the VLP-JEVe antigen developed high titers of neutralizing antibodies and 100% protection against lethal JEV challenge. The neutralizing and hemagglutination inhibition (HI) antibody responses were also induced in guinea pigs vaccinated with VLP-JEVe. In addition, immunization with VLP-JEVe in mice induced effective neutralizing antibodies and protective immunity again...