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Characterization of the therapeutic effect of antibodies targeting the Ebola glycoprotein using a novel BSL2-compliant rVSVΔG-EBOV-GP infection model

Ebola virus (EBOV) infections cause haemorrhagic fever, multi-organ failure and death, and survivors can experience neurological sequelae. Licensing of monoclonal antibodies targeting EBOV glycoprotein (EBOV-GP) improved its prognosis, however, this treatment is primarily effective during early stag...

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Autores principales: Lee, Ha-Na, McWilliams, Ian L., Lewkowicz, Aaron P., Engel, Kaliroi, Ireland, Derek D. C., Kelley-Baker, Logan, Thacker, Seth, Piccardo, Pedro, Manangeeswaran, Mohanraj, Verthelyi, Daniela
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8583756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34674613
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/22221751.2021.1997075
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author Lee, Ha-Na
McWilliams, Ian L.
Lewkowicz, Aaron P.
Engel, Kaliroi
Ireland, Derek D. C.
Kelley-Baker, Logan
Thacker, Seth
Piccardo, Pedro
Manangeeswaran, Mohanraj
Verthelyi, Daniela
author_facet Lee, Ha-Na
McWilliams, Ian L.
Lewkowicz, Aaron P.
Engel, Kaliroi
Ireland, Derek D. C.
Kelley-Baker, Logan
Thacker, Seth
Piccardo, Pedro
Manangeeswaran, Mohanraj
Verthelyi, Daniela
author_sort Lee, Ha-Na
collection PubMed
description Ebola virus (EBOV) infections cause haemorrhagic fever, multi-organ failure and death, and survivors can experience neurological sequelae. Licensing of monoclonal antibodies targeting EBOV glycoprotein (EBOV-GP) improved its prognosis, however, this treatment is primarily effective during early stages of disease and its effectiveness in reducing neurological sequela remains unknown. Currently, the need for BSL4 containment hinders research and therapeutic development; development of an accessible BSL-2 in vivo mouse model would facilitate preclinical studies to screen and select therapeutics. Previously, we have shown that a subcutaneous inoculation with replicating EBOV-GP pseudotyped vesicular stomatitis virus (rVSVΔG-EBOV-GP or VSV-EBOV) in neonatal mice causes transient viremia and infection of the mid and posterior brain resulting in overt neurological symptoms and death. Here, we demonstrate that the model can be used to test therapeutics that target the EBOV-GP, by using an anti-EBOV-GP therapeutic (SAB-139) previously shown to block EBOV infection in mice and primates. We show that SAB-139 treatment decreases the severity of neurological symptoms and improves survival when administered before (1 day prior to infection) or up to 3 dpi, by which time animals have high virus titres in their brains. Improved survival was associated with reduced viral titres, microglia loss, cellular infiltration/activation, and inflammatory responses in the brain. Interestingly, SAB-139 treatment significantly reduced the severe VSV-EBOV-induced long-term neurological sequalae although convalescent mice showed modest evidence of abnormal fear responses. Together, these data suggest that the neonatal VSV-EBOV infection system can be used to facilitate assessment of therapeutics targeting EBOV-GP in the preclinical setting.
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spelling pubmed-85837562021-11-12 Characterization of the therapeutic effect of antibodies targeting the Ebola glycoprotein using a novel BSL2-compliant rVSVΔG-EBOV-GP infection model Lee, Ha-Na McWilliams, Ian L. Lewkowicz, Aaron P. Engel, Kaliroi Ireland, Derek D. C. Kelley-Baker, Logan Thacker, Seth Piccardo, Pedro Manangeeswaran, Mohanraj Verthelyi, Daniela Emerg Microbes Infect Research Article Ebola virus (EBOV) infections cause haemorrhagic fever, multi-organ failure and death, and survivors can experience neurological sequelae. Licensing of monoclonal antibodies targeting EBOV glycoprotein (EBOV-GP) improved its prognosis, however, this treatment is primarily effective during early stages of disease and its effectiveness in reducing neurological sequela remains unknown. Currently, the need for BSL4 containment hinders research and therapeutic development; development of an accessible BSL-2 in vivo mouse model would facilitate preclinical studies to screen and select therapeutics. Previously, we have shown that a subcutaneous inoculation with replicating EBOV-GP pseudotyped vesicular stomatitis virus (rVSVΔG-EBOV-GP or VSV-EBOV) in neonatal mice causes transient viremia and infection of the mid and posterior brain resulting in overt neurological symptoms and death. Here, we demonstrate that the model can be used to test therapeutics that target the EBOV-GP, by using an anti-EBOV-GP therapeutic (SAB-139) previously shown to block EBOV infection in mice and primates. We show that SAB-139 treatment decreases the severity of neurological symptoms and improves survival when administered before (1 day prior to infection) or up to 3 dpi, by which time animals have high virus titres in their brains. Improved survival was associated with reduced viral titres, microglia loss, cellular infiltration/activation, and inflammatory responses in the brain. Interestingly, SAB-139 treatment significantly reduced the severe VSV-EBOV-induced long-term neurological sequalae although convalescent mice showed modest evidence of abnormal fear responses. Together, these data suggest that the neonatal VSV-EBOV infection system can be used to facilitate assessment of therapeutics targeting EBOV-GP in the preclinical setting. Taylor & Francis 2021-11-10 /pmc/articles/PMC8583756/ /pubmed/34674613 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/22221751.2021.1997075 Text en © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group, on behalf of Shanghai Shangyixun Cultural Communication Co., Ltd https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lee, Ha-Na
McWilliams, Ian L.
Lewkowicz, Aaron P.
Engel, Kaliroi
Ireland, Derek D. C.
Kelley-Baker, Logan
Thacker, Seth
Piccardo, Pedro
Manangeeswaran, Mohanraj
Verthelyi, Daniela
Characterization of the therapeutic effect of antibodies targeting the Ebola glycoprotein using a novel BSL2-compliant rVSVΔG-EBOV-GP infection model
title Characterization of the therapeutic effect of antibodies targeting the Ebola glycoprotein using a novel BSL2-compliant rVSVΔG-EBOV-GP infection model
title_full Characterization of the therapeutic effect of antibodies targeting the Ebola glycoprotein using a novel BSL2-compliant rVSVΔG-EBOV-GP infection model
title_fullStr Characterization of the therapeutic effect of antibodies targeting the Ebola glycoprotein using a novel BSL2-compliant rVSVΔG-EBOV-GP infection model
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of the therapeutic effect of antibodies targeting the Ebola glycoprotein using a novel BSL2-compliant rVSVΔG-EBOV-GP infection model
title_short Characterization of the therapeutic effect of antibodies targeting the Ebola glycoprotein using a novel BSL2-compliant rVSVΔG-EBOV-GP infection model
title_sort characterization of the therapeutic effect of antibodies targeting the ebola glycoprotein using a novel bsl2-compliant rvsvδg-ebov-gp infection model
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8583756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34674613
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/22221751.2021.1997075
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