1. Live vaccine infection burden elicits adaptive humoral and cellular immunity required to prevent Zika virus infection.
- Author
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Yau C, Gan ES, Kwek SS, Tan HC, Ong EZ, Hamis NZ, Rivino L, Chan KR, Watanabe S, Vasudevan SG, and Ooi EE
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Neutralizing blood, Antibodies, Neutralizing immunology, Antibodies, Viral blood, Antibodies, Viral immunology, Cell Line, Disease Models, Animal, Epididymis pathology, Epididymis virology, Female, Humans, Immunization, Leukocytes, Mononuclear immunology, Leukocytes, Mononuclear metabolism, Male, Mice, Neutralization Tests, T-Lymphocyte Subsets immunology, T-Lymphocyte Subsets metabolism, Testis immunology, Testis pathology, Testis virology, Vaccines, Attenuated administration & dosage, Viral Vaccines administration & dosage, Zika Virus immunology, Zika Virus Infection virology, Immunity, Cellular, Immunity, Humoral, Vaccines, Attenuated immunology, Viral Vaccines immunology, Zika Virus Infection immunology, Zika Virus Infection prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: The emergence of Zika virus (ZIKV) as an important cause of congenital and childhood developmental disorders presents another challenge to global health. Efforts to develop a Zika vaccine have begun although vaccine development against flaviviruses, of which ZIKV belongs to, has proven to be time-consuming and challenging. Defining the vaccine attributes that elicit adaptive immune response necessary for preventing ZIKV infection could provide an evidence-based guide to Zika vaccine development., Methods: We used a previously described attenuated ZIKV DN-2 strain in a type-I interferon receptor deficient mouse model and tested the hypothesis that duration of vaccine burden rather than peak level of infection, is a determinant of immunogenicity. We quantified both humoral and cellular responses against ZIKV using plaque reduction neutralisation test and flow cytometry with ELISPOT assays, respectively. Vaccinated mice were challenged with wild-type ZIKV (H/PF/2013 strain) to determine the level of protection against infection., Findings: We found that the overall vaccine burden is directly correlated with neutralising antibody titres. Reduced duration of vaccine burden lowered neutralising antibody titres that resulted in subclinical infection, despite unchanged peak vaccine viraemia levels. We also found that sterilising immunity is dependant on both neutralising antibody and CD8
+ T cell responses; depletion of CD8+ T cells in vaccinated animals led to wild-type ZIKV infection, especially in the male reproductive tract., Interpretation: Our findings indicate that duration of attenuated virus vaccine burden is a determinant of humoral and cellular immunity and also suggest that vaccines that elicit both arms of the adaptive immune response are needed to fully prevent ZIKV transmission., Funding: This study was supported by the National Medical Research Council through the Clinician-Scientist Award (Senior Investigator) to E.E.O. Salary support for S.W. was from a Competitive Research Programme grant awarded by the National Research Foundation of Singapore., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest E.E.O and S.S.K. have an issued patent titled “Rapid method of generating live attenuated vaccines” (Singapore patent publication number: 10201602980W), which includes the Zika virus strain DN-2 used in this study. The authors declare no other competing interests., (Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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