Cargando…
Relationship of maternal cytomegalovirus-specific antibody responses and viral load to vertical transmission risk following primary maternal infection in a rhesus macaque model
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the most common congenital infection and cause of birth defects worldwide. Primary CMV infection during pregnancy leads to a higher frequency of congenital CMV (cCMV) than maternal re-infection, suggesting that maternal immunity confers partial protection. However, poorly un...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Public Library of Science
2023
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10621917/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37871009 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1011378 |
_version_ | 1785130455672029184 |
---|---|
author | Otero, Claire E. Barfield, Richard Scheef, Elizabeth Nelson, Cody S. Rodgers, Nicole Wang, Hsuan-Yuan Moström, Matilda J. Manuel, Tabitha D. Sass, Julian Schmidt, Kimberli Taher, Husam Papen, Courtney Sprehe, Lesli Kendall, Savannah Davalos, Angel Barry, Peter A. Früh, Klaus Pollara, Justin Malouli, Daniel Chan, Cliburn Kaur, Amitinder Permar, Sallie R. |
author_facet | Otero, Claire E. Barfield, Richard Scheef, Elizabeth Nelson, Cody S. Rodgers, Nicole Wang, Hsuan-Yuan Moström, Matilda J. Manuel, Tabitha D. Sass, Julian Schmidt, Kimberli Taher, Husam Papen, Courtney Sprehe, Lesli Kendall, Savannah Davalos, Angel Barry, Peter A. Früh, Klaus Pollara, Justin Malouli, Daniel Chan, Cliburn Kaur, Amitinder Permar, Sallie R. |
author_sort | Otero, Claire E. |
collection | PubMed |
description | Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the most common congenital infection and cause of birth defects worldwide. Primary CMV infection during pregnancy leads to a higher frequency of congenital CMV (cCMV) than maternal re-infection, suggesting that maternal immunity confers partial protection. However, poorly understood immune correlates of protection against placental transmission contributes to the current lack of an approved vaccine to prevent cCMV. In this study, we characterized the kinetics of maternal plasma rhesus CMV (RhCMV) viral load (VL) and RhCMV-specific antibody binding and functional responses in a group of 12 immunocompetent dams with acute, primary RhCMV infection. We defined cCMV transmission as RhCMV detection in amniotic fluid (AF) by qPCR. We then leveraged a large group of past and current primary RhCMV infection studies in late-first/early-second trimester RhCMV-seronegative rhesus macaque dams, including immunocompetent (n = 15), CD4+ T cell-depleted with (n = 6) and without (n = 6) RhCMV-specific polyclonal IgG infusion before infection to evaluate differences between RhCMV AF-positive and AF-negative dams. During the first 3 weeks after infection, the magnitude of RhCMV VL in maternal plasma was higher in AF-positive dams in the combined cohort, while RhCMV glycoprotein B (gB)- and pentamer-specific binding IgG responses were lower magnitude compared to AF-negative dams. However, these observed differences were driven by the CD4+ T cell-depleted dams, as there were no differences in plasma VL or antibody responses between immunocompetent AF-positive vs AF-negative dams. Overall, these results suggest that levels of neither maternal plasma viremia nor humoral responses are associated with cCMV following primary maternal infection in healthy individuals. We speculate that other factors related to innate immunity are more important in this context as antibody responses to acute infection likely develop too late to influence vertical transmission. Yet, pre-existing CMV glycoprotein-specific and neutralizing IgG may provide protection against cCMV following primary maternal CMV infection even in high-risk, immunocompromised settings. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-10621917 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2023 |
publisher | Public Library of Science |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-106219172023-11-03 Relationship of maternal cytomegalovirus-specific antibody responses and viral load to vertical transmission risk following primary maternal infection in a rhesus macaque model Otero, Claire E. Barfield, Richard Scheef, Elizabeth Nelson, Cody S. Rodgers, Nicole Wang, Hsuan-Yuan Moström, Matilda J. Manuel, Tabitha D. Sass, Julian Schmidt, Kimberli Taher, Husam Papen, Courtney Sprehe, Lesli Kendall, Savannah Davalos, Angel Barry, Peter A. Früh, Klaus Pollara, Justin Malouli, Daniel Chan, Cliburn Kaur, Amitinder Permar, Sallie R. PLoS Pathog Research Article Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the most common congenital infection and cause of birth defects worldwide. Primary CMV infection during pregnancy leads to a higher frequency of congenital CMV (cCMV) than maternal re-infection, suggesting that maternal immunity confers partial protection. However, poorly understood immune correlates of protection against placental transmission contributes to the current lack of an approved vaccine to prevent cCMV. In this study, we characterized the kinetics of maternal plasma rhesus CMV (RhCMV) viral load (VL) and RhCMV-specific antibody binding and functional responses in a group of 12 immunocompetent dams with acute, primary RhCMV infection. We defined cCMV transmission as RhCMV detection in amniotic fluid (AF) by qPCR. We then leveraged a large group of past and current primary RhCMV infection studies in late-first/early-second trimester RhCMV-seronegative rhesus macaque dams, including immunocompetent (n = 15), CD4+ T cell-depleted with (n = 6) and without (n = 6) RhCMV-specific polyclonal IgG infusion before infection to evaluate differences between RhCMV AF-positive and AF-negative dams. During the first 3 weeks after infection, the magnitude of RhCMV VL in maternal plasma was higher in AF-positive dams in the combined cohort, while RhCMV glycoprotein B (gB)- and pentamer-specific binding IgG responses were lower magnitude compared to AF-negative dams. However, these observed differences were driven by the CD4+ T cell-depleted dams, as there were no differences in plasma VL or antibody responses between immunocompetent AF-positive vs AF-negative dams. Overall, these results suggest that levels of neither maternal plasma viremia nor humoral responses are associated with cCMV following primary maternal infection in healthy individuals. We speculate that other factors related to innate immunity are more important in this context as antibody responses to acute infection likely develop too late to influence vertical transmission. Yet, pre-existing CMV glycoprotein-specific and neutralizing IgG may provide protection against cCMV following primary maternal CMV infection even in high-risk, immunocompromised settings. Public Library of Science 2023-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC10621917/ /pubmed/37871009 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1011378 Text en © 2023 Otero et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. |
spellingShingle | Research Article Otero, Claire E. Barfield, Richard Scheef, Elizabeth Nelson, Cody S. Rodgers, Nicole Wang, Hsuan-Yuan Moström, Matilda J. Manuel, Tabitha D. Sass, Julian Schmidt, Kimberli Taher, Husam Papen, Courtney Sprehe, Lesli Kendall, Savannah Davalos, Angel Barry, Peter A. Früh, Klaus Pollara, Justin Malouli, Daniel Chan, Cliburn Kaur, Amitinder Permar, Sallie R. Relationship of maternal cytomegalovirus-specific antibody responses and viral load to vertical transmission risk following primary maternal infection in a rhesus macaque model |
title | Relationship of maternal cytomegalovirus-specific antibody responses and viral load to vertical transmission risk following primary maternal infection in a rhesus macaque model |
title_full | Relationship of maternal cytomegalovirus-specific antibody responses and viral load to vertical transmission risk following primary maternal infection in a rhesus macaque model |
title_fullStr | Relationship of maternal cytomegalovirus-specific antibody responses and viral load to vertical transmission risk following primary maternal infection in a rhesus macaque model |
title_full_unstemmed | Relationship of maternal cytomegalovirus-specific antibody responses and viral load to vertical transmission risk following primary maternal infection in a rhesus macaque model |
title_short | Relationship of maternal cytomegalovirus-specific antibody responses and viral load to vertical transmission risk following primary maternal infection in a rhesus macaque model |
title_sort | relationship of maternal cytomegalovirus-specific antibody responses and viral load to vertical transmission risk following primary maternal infection in a rhesus macaque model |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10621917/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37871009 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1011378 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT oteroclairee relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT barfieldrichard relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT scheefelizabeth relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT nelsoncodys relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT rodgersnicole relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT wanghsuanyuan relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT mostrommatildaj relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT manueltabithad relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT sassjulian relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT schmidtkimberli relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT taherhusam relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT papencourtney relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT sprehelesli relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT kendallsavannah relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT davalosangel relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT barrypetera relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT fruhklaus relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT pollarajustin relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT maloulidaniel relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT chancliburn relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT kauramitinder relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel AT permarsallier relationshipofmaternalcytomegalovirusspecificantibodyresponsesandviralloadtoverticaltransmissionriskfollowingprimarymaternalinfectioninarhesusmacaquemodel |