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Yellow fever vaccine protects mice against Zika virus infection

Zika virus (ZIKV) emerged as an important infectious disease agent in Brazil in 2016. Infection usually leads to mild symptoms, but severe congenital neurological disorders and Guillain-Barré syndrome have been reported following ZIKV exposure. Creating an effective vaccine against ZIKV is a public...

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Autores principales: Vicente Santos, Ana C., Guedes-da-Silva, Francisca H., Dumard, Carlos H., Ferreira, Vivian N. S., da Costa, Igor P. S., Machado, Ruana A., Barros-Aragão, Fernanda G. Q., Neris, Rômulo L. S., dos-Santos, Júlio S., Assunção-Miranda, Iranaia, Figueiredo, Claudia P., Dias, André A., Gomes, Andre M. O., de Matos Guedes, Herbert L., Oliveira, Andrea C., Silva, Jerson L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8594798/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34735450
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009907
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author Vicente Santos, Ana C.
Guedes-da-Silva, Francisca H.
Dumard, Carlos H.
Ferreira, Vivian N. S.
da Costa, Igor P. S.
Machado, Ruana A.
Barros-Aragão, Fernanda G. Q.
Neris, Rômulo L. S.
dos-Santos, Júlio S.
Assunção-Miranda, Iranaia
Figueiredo, Claudia P.
Dias, André A.
Gomes, Andre M. O.
de Matos Guedes, Herbert L.
Oliveira, Andrea C.
Silva, Jerson L.
author_facet Vicente Santos, Ana C.
Guedes-da-Silva, Francisca H.
Dumard, Carlos H.
Ferreira, Vivian N. S.
da Costa, Igor P. S.
Machado, Ruana A.
Barros-Aragão, Fernanda G. Q.
Neris, Rômulo L. S.
dos-Santos, Júlio S.
Assunção-Miranda, Iranaia
Figueiredo, Claudia P.
Dias, André A.
Gomes, Andre M. O.
de Matos Guedes, Herbert L.
Oliveira, Andrea C.
Silva, Jerson L.
author_sort Vicente Santos, Ana C.
collection PubMed
description Zika virus (ZIKV) emerged as an important infectious disease agent in Brazil in 2016. Infection usually leads to mild symptoms, but severe congenital neurological disorders and Guillain-Barré syndrome have been reported following ZIKV exposure. Creating an effective vaccine against ZIKV is a public health priority. We describe the protective effect of an already licensed attenuated yellow fever vaccine (YFV, 17DD) in type-I interferon receptor knockout mice (A129) and immunocompetent BALB/c and SV-129 (A129 background) mice infected with ZIKV. YFV vaccination provided protection against ZIKV, with decreased mortality in A129 mice, a reduction in the cerebral viral load in all mice, and weight loss prevention in BALB/c mice. The A129 mice that were challenged two and three weeks after the first dose of the vaccine were fully protected, whereas partial protection was observed five weeks after vaccination. In all cases, the YFV vaccine provoked a substantial decrease in the cerebral viral load. YFV immunization also prevented hippocampal synapse loss and microgliosis in ZIKV-infected mice. Our vaccine model is T cell-dependent, with AG129 mice being unable to tolerate immunization (vaccination is lethal in this mouse model), indicating the importance of IFN-γ in immunogenicity. To confirm the role of T cells, we immunized nude mice that we demonstrated to be very susceptible to infection. Immunization with YFV and challenge 7 days after booster did not protect nude mice in terms of weight loss and showed partial protection in the survival curve. When we evaluated the humoral response, the vaccine elicited significant antibody titers against ZIKV; however, it showed no neutralizing activity in vitro and in vivo. The data indicate that a cell-mediated response promotes protection against cerebral infection, which is crucial to vaccine protection, and it appears to not necessarily require a humoral response. This protective effect can also be attributed to innate factors, but more studies are needed to strengthen this hypothesis. Our findings open the way to using an available and inexpensive vaccine for large-scale immunization in the event of a ZIKV outbreak.
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spelling pubmed-85947982021-11-17 Yellow fever vaccine protects mice against Zika virus infection Vicente Santos, Ana C. Guedes-da-Silva, Francisca H. Dumard, Carlos H. Ferreira, Vivian N. S. da Costa, Igor P. S. Machado, Ruana A. Barros-Aragão, Fernanda G. Q. Neris, Rômulo L. S. dos-Santos, Júlio S. Assunção-Miranda, Iranaia Figueiredo, Claudia P. Dias, André A. Gomes, Andre M. O. de Matos Guedes, Herbert L. Oliveira, Andrea C. Silva, Jerson L. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article Zika virus (ZIKV) emerged as an important infectious disease agent in Brazil in 2016. Infection usually leads to mild symptoms, but severe congenital neurological disorders and Guillain-Barré syndrome have been reported following ZIKV exposure. Creating an effective vaccine against ZIKV is a public health priority. We describe the protective effect of an already licensed attenuated yellow fever vaccine (YFV, 17DD) in type-I interferon receptor knockout mice (A129) and immunocompetent BALB/c and SV-129 (A129 background) mice infected with ZIKV. YFV vaccination provided protection against ZIKV, with decreased mortality in A129 mice, a reduction in the cerebral viral load in all mice, and weight loss prevention in BALB/c mice. The A129 mice that were challenged two and three weeks after the first dose of the vaccine were fully protected, whereas partial protection was observed five weeks after vaccination. In all cases, the YFV vaccine provoked a substantial decrease in the cerebral viral load. YFV immunization also prevented hippocampal synapse loss and microgliosis in ZIKV-infected mice. Our vaccine model is T cell-dependent, with AG129 mice being unable to tolerate immunization (vaccination is lethal in this mouse model), indicating the importance of IFN-γ in immunogenicity. To confirm the role of T cells, we immunized nude mice that we demonstrated to be very susceptible to infection. Immunization with YFV and challenge 7 days after booster did not protect nude mice in terms of weight loss and showed partial protection in the survival curve. When we evaluated the humoral response, the vaccine elicited significant antibody titers against ZIKV; however, it showed no neutralizing activity in vitro and in vivo. The data indicate that a cell-mediated response promotes protection against cerebral infection, which is crucial to vaccine protection, and it appears to not necessarily require a humoral response. This protective effect can also be attributed to innate factors, but more studies are needed to strengthen this hypothesis. Our findings open the way to using an available and inexpensive vaccine for large-scale immunization in the event of a ZIKV outbreak. Public Library of Science 2021-11-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8594798/ /pubmed/34735450 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009907 Text en © 2021 Vicente Santos 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
Vicente Santos, Ana C.
Guedes-da-Silva, Francisca H.
Dumard, Carlos H.
Ferreira, Vivian N. S.
da Costa, Igor P. S.
Machado, Ruana A.
Barros-Aragão, Fernanda G. Q.
Neris, Rômulo L. S.
dos-Santos, Júlio S.
Assunção-Miranda, Iranaia
Figueiredo, Claudia P.
Dias, André A.
Gomes, Andre M. O.
de Matos Guedes, Herbert L.
Oliveira, Andrea C.
Silva, Jerson L.
Yellow fever vaccine protects mice against Zika virus infection
title Yellow fever vaccine protects mice against Zika virus infection
title_full Yellow fever vaccine protects mice against Zika virus infection
title_fullStr Yellow fever vaccine protects mice against Zika virus infection
title_full_unstemmed Yellow fever vaccine protects mice against Zika virus infection
title_short Yellow fever vaccine protects mice against Zika virus infection
title_sort yellow fever vaccine protects mice against zika virus infection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8594798/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34735450
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009907
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