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Protection of calves by a prefusion-stabilized bovine RSV F vaccine.

Authors :
Zhang B
Chen L
Silacci C
Thom M
Boyington JC
Druz A
Joyce MG
Guzman E
Kong WP
Lai YT
Stewart-Jones GBE
Tsybovsky Y
Yang Y
Zhou T
Baxa U
Mascola JR
Corti D
Lanzavecchia A
Taylor G
Kwong PD
Source :
NPJ vaccines [NPJ Vaccines] 2017 Mar 08; Vol. 2, pp. 7.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Bovine respiratory syncytial virus, a major cause of respiratory disease in calves, is closely related to human RSV, a leading cause of respiratory disease in infants. Recently, promising human RSV-vaccine candidates have been engineered that stabilize the metastable fusion (F) glycoprotein in its prefusion state; however, the absence of a relevant animal model for human RSV has complicated assessment of these vaccine candidates. Here, we use a combination of structure-based design, antigenic characterization, and X-ray crystallography to translate human RSV F stabilization into the bovine context. A "DS2" version of bovine respiratory syncytial virus F with subunits covalently fused, fusion peptide removed, and pre-fusion conformation stabilized by cavity-filling mutations and intra- and inter-protomer disulfides was recognized by pre-fusion-specific antibodies, AM14, D25, and MPE8, and elicited bovine respiratory syncytial virus-neutralizing titers in calves >100-fold higher than those elicited by post-fusion F. When challenged with a heterologous bovine respiratory syncytial virus, virus was not detected in nasal secretions nor in respiratory tract samples of DS2-immunized calves; by contrast bovine respiratory syncytial virus was detected in all post-fusion- and placebo-immunized calves. Our results demonstrate proof-of-concept that DS2-stabilized RSV F immunogens can induce highly protective immunity from RSV in a native host with implications for the efficacy of prefusion-stabilized F vaccines in humans and for the prevention of bovine respiratory syncytial virus in calves.<br />Competing Interests: Competing Interests The authors declare that an intellectual property application has been filed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2059-0105
Volume :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
NPJ vaccines
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29021918
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41541-017-0005-9