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A Parainfluenza Virus Vector Expressing the Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) Prefusion F Protein Is More Effective than RSV for Boosting a Primary Immunization with RSV.

Authors :
Bo Liang
Yumiko Matsuoka
Nouën, Cyril Le
Xueqiao Liu
Herbert, Richard
Swerczek, Joanna
Santos, Celia
Paneru, Monica
Collins, Peter L.
Buchholz, Ursula J.
Munir, Shirin
Source :
Journal of Virology. 2021, Vol. 95 Issue 2, p1-24. 24p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Live-attenuated pediatric vaccines for intranasal administration are being developed for human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), an important worldwide pediatric respiratory pathogen that lacks a licensed vaccine or suitable antiviral drug. We evaluated a prime-boost strategy in which primary immunization with RSV was boosted by secondary immunization with RSV or with a chimeric recombinant bovine/human parainfluenza virus type 3 (rB/HPIV3) vector expressing the RSV fusion F protein. The vector-expressed F protein had been engineered (DS-Cav1 mutations) for increased stability in the highly immunogenic prefusion (pre-F) conformation, with or without replacement of its transmembrane and cytoplasmic tail domains with their counterparts from bovine parainfluenza virus type 3 (BPIV3) F protein to direct incorporation into the vector virion for increased immunogenicity. In hamsters that received a primary infection with RSV, a booster infection with RSV ~6 weeks later was completely restricted for producing infectious virus but induced a significant increase in the serum RSV-plaque-reduction neutralizing antibody titer (RSVPRNT). Boosting instead with the rB/HPIV3-RSV-pre-F vectors resulted in efficient replication and induced significantly higher RSV-PRNTs than RSV. In African green monkeys that received a primary infection with RSV, a booster infection with RSV ~2, ~6, or ~15 months later was highly restricted, whereas booster infections with the vectors had robust replication. Compared with RSV, boosts with the vectors induced 7- to 15-fold higher titers of RSV-specific serum antibodies with high neutralizing activity, as well as significantly higher titers of RSV-specific mucosal IgA antibodies. These findings support further development of this heterologous primeboost strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0022538X
Volume :
95
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Virology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
147761079
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01512-20