Cargando…

Inactivated genotype 1a, 2a and 3a HCV vaccine candidates induced broadly neutralising antibodies in mice

OBJECTIVE: A prophylactic vaccine is needed to control the HCV epidemic, with genotypes 1–3 causing >80% of worldwide infections. Vaccine development is hampered by HCV heterogeneity, viral escape including protection of conserved neutralising epitopes and suboptimal efficacy of HCV cell culture...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Alzua, Garazi Pena, Pihl, Anne Finne, Offersgaard, Anna, Duarte Hernandez, Carlos Rene, Duan, Zhe, Feng, Shan, Fahnøe, Ulrik, Sølund, Christina, Weis, Nina, Law, Mansun, Prentoe, Jannick C, Christensen, Jan Pravsgaard, Bukh, Jens, Gottwein, Judith Margarete
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9933178/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35918103
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2021-326323
Descripción
Sumario:OBJECTIVE: A prophylactic vaccine is needed to control the HCV epidemic, with genotypes 1–3 causing >80% of worldwide infections. Vaccine development is hampered by HCV heterogeneity, viral escape including protection of conserved neutralising epitopes and suboptimal efficacy of HCV cell culture systems. We developed cell culture-based inactivated genotype 1–3 HCV vaccine candidates to present natively folded envelope proteins to elicit neutralising antibodies. DESIGN: High-yield genotype 1a, 2a and 3a HCV were developed by serial passage of TNcc, J6cc and DBN3acc in Huh7.5 cells and engineering of acquired mutations detected by next-generation sequencing. Neutralising epitope exposure was determined in cell-based neutralisation assays using human monoclonal antibodies AR3A and AR4A, and polyclonal antibody C211. BALB/c mice were immunised with processed and inactivated genotype 1a, 2a or 3a viruses using AddaVax, a homologue of the licenced adjuvant MF-59. Purified mouse and patient serum IgG were assayed for neutralisation capacity; mouse IgG and immune-sera were assayed for E1/E2 binding. RESULTS: Compared with the original viruses, high-yield viruses had up to ~1000 fold increased infectivity titres (peak titres: 6–7 log10 focus-forming units (FFU)/mL) and up to ~2470 fold increased exposure of conserved neutralising epitopes. Vaccine-induced IgG broadly neutralised genotype 1–6 HCV (EC50: 30–193 µg/mL; mean 71 µg/mL), compared favourably with IgG from chronically infected patients, and bound genotype 1–3 E1/E2; immune-sera endpoint titres reached up to 32 000. CONCLUSION: High-yield genotype 1–3 HCV could be developed as basis for inactivated vaccine candidates inducing broadly neutralising antibodies in mice supporting further preclinical development.