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Immune Memory to Sudan Virus: Comparison between Two Separate Disease Outbreaks

Recovery from ebolavirus infection in humans is associated with the development of both cell-mediated and humoral immune responses. According to recent studies, individuals that did not survive infection with ebolaviruses appear to have lacked a robust adaptive immune response and the expression of...

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Autores principales: Sobarzo, Ariel, Eskira, Yael, Herbert, Andrew S., Kuehne, Ana I., Stonier, Spencer W., Ochayon, David E., Fedida-Metula, Shlomit, Balinandi, Steven, Kislev, Yaara, Tali, Neta, Lewis, Eli C., Lutwama, Julius Julian, Dye, John M., Yavelsky, Victoria, Lobel, Leslie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4306827/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25569078
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v7010037
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author Sobarzo, Ariel
Eskira, Yael
Herbert, Andrew S.
Kuehne, Ana I.
Stonier, Spencer W.
Ochayon, David E.
Fedida-Metula, Shlomit
Balinandi, Steven
Kislev, Yaara
Tali, Neta
Lewis, Eli C.
Lutwama, Julius Julian
Dye, John M.
Yavelsky, Victoria
Lobel, Leslie
author_facet Sobarzo, Ariel
Eskira, Yael
Herbert, Andrew S.
Kuehne, Ana I.
Stonier, Spencer W.
Ochayon, David E.
Fedida-Metula, Shlomit
Balinandi, Steven
Kislev, Yaara
Tali, Neta
Lewis, Eli C.
Lutwama, Julius Julian
Dye, John M.
Yavelsky, Victoria
Lobel, Leslie
author_sort Sobarzo, Ariel
collection PubMed
description Recovery from ebolavirus infection in humans is associated with the development of both cell-mediated and humoral immune responses. According to recent studies, individuals that did not survive infection with ebolaviruses appear to have lacked a robust adaptive immune response and the expression of several early innate response markers. However, a comprehensive protective immune profile has yet to be described. Here, we examine cellular memory immune responses among survivors of two separate Ebolavirus outbreaks (EVDs) due to Sudan virus (SUDV) infection in Uganda—Gulu 2000–2001 and Kibaale 2012. Freshly collected blood samples were stimulated with inactivated SUDV, as well as with recombinant SUDV or Ebola virus (EBOV) GP (GP(1–649)). In addition, ELISA and plaque reduction neutralization assays were performed to determine anti-SUDV IgG titers and neutralization capacity. Cytokine expression was measured in whole blood cultures in response to SUDV and SUDV GP stimulation in both survivor pools, demonstrating recall responses that indicate immune memory. Cytokine responses between groups were similar but had distinct differences. Neutralizing, SUDV-specific IgG activity against irradiated SUDV and SUDV recombinant proteins were detected in both survivor cohorts. Furthermore, humoral and cell-mediated crossreactivity to EBOV and EBOV recombinant GP(1–649) was observed in both cohorts. In conclusion, immune responses in both groups of survivors demonstrate persistent recognition of relevant antigens, albeit larger cohorts are required in order to reach greater statistical significance. The differing cytokine responses between Gulu and Kibaale outbreak survivors suggests that each outbreak may not yield identical memory responses and promotes the merits of studying the immune responses among outbreaks of the same virus. Finally, our demonstration of cross-reactive immune recognition suggests that there is potential for developing cross-protective vaccines for ebolaviruses.
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spelling pubmed-43068272015-02-02 Immune Memory to Sudan Virus: Comparison between Two Separate Disease Outbreaks Sobarzo, Ariel Eskira, Yael Herbert, Andrew S. Kuehne, Ana I. Stonier, Spencer W. Ochayon, David E. Fedida-Metula, Shlomit Balinandi, Steven Kislev, Yaara Tali, Neta Lewis, Eli C. Lutwama, Julius Julian Dye, John M. Yavelsky, Victoria Lobel, Leslie Viruses Article Recovery from ebolavirus infection in humans is associated with the development of both cell-mediated and humoral immune responses. According to recent studies, individuals that did not survive infection with ebolaviruses appear to have lacked a robust adaptive immune response and the expression of several early innate response markers. However, a comprehensive protective immune profile has yet to be described. Here, we examine cellular memory immune responses among survivors of two separate Ebolavirus outbreaks (EVDs) due to Sudan virus (SUDV) infection in Uganda—Gulu 2000–2001 and Kibaale 2012. Freshly collected blood samples were stimulated with inactivated SUDV, as well as with recombinant SUDV or Ebola virus (EBOV) GP (GP(1–649)). In addition, ELISA and plaque reduction neutralization assays were performed to determine anti-SUDV IgG titers and neutralization capacity. Cytokine expression was measured in whole blood cultures in response to SUDV and SUDV GP stimulation in both survivor pools, demonstrating recall responses that indicate immune memory. Cytokine responses between groups were similar but had distinct differences. Neutralizing, SUDV-specific IgG activity against irradiated SUDV and SUDV recombinant proteins were detected in both survivor cohorts. Furthermore, humoral and cell-mediated crossreactivity to EBOV and EBOV recombinant GP(1–649) was observed in both cohorts. In conclusion, immune responses in both groups of survivors demonstrate persistent recognition of relevant antigens, albeit larger cohorts are required in order to reach greater statistical significance. The differing cytokine responses between Gulu and Kibaale outbreak survivors suggests that each outbreak may not yield identical memory responses and promotes the merits of studying the immune responses among outbreaks of the same virus. Finally, our demonstration of cross-reactive immune recognition suggests that there is potential for developing cross-protective vaccines for ebolaviruses. MDPI 2015-01-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4306827/ /pubmed/25569078 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v7010037 Text en © 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Sobarzo, Ariel
Eskira, Yael
Herbert, Andrew S.
Kuehne, Ana I.
Stonier, Spencer W.
Ochayon, David E.
Fedida-Metula, Shlomit
Balinandi, Steven
Kislev, Yaara
Tali, Neta
Lewis, Eli C.
Lutwama, Julius Julian
Dye, John M.
Yavelsky, Victoria
Lobel, Leslie
Immune Memory to Sudan Virus: Comparison between Two Separate Disease Outbreaks
title Immune Memory to Sudan Virus: Comparison between Two Separate Disease Outbreaks
title_full Immune Memory to Sudan Virus: Comparison between Two Separate Disease Outbreaks
title_fullStr Immune Memory to Sudan Virus: Comparison between Two Separate Disease Outbreaks
title_full_unstemmed Immune Memory to Sudan Virus: Comparison between Two Separate Disease Outbreaks
title_short Immune Memory to Sudan Virus: Comparison between Two Separate Disease Outbreaks
title_sort immune memory to sudan virus: comparison between two separate disease outbreaks
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4306827/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25569078
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v7010037
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