AAV-monoclonal antibody expression protects mice from Ebola virus without impeding the endogenous antibody response to heterologous challenge

Molecular Therapy - Methods & Clinical Development(2022)

引用 4|浏览36
暂无评分
摘要
Filoviruses cause severe hemorrhagic fever with case fatality rates as high as 90%. Filovirus-specific monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) confer protection in nonhuman primates as late as 5 days after challenge, and FDA-approved mAbs REGN-EB3 and mAb114 have demonstrated efficacy against Ebola virus (EBOV) infection in humans. Vectorized antibody expression mediated by adeno-associated virus (AAV) can generate protective and sustained concentrations of therapeutic mAbs in animal models for a variety of infectious diseases, including EBOV. Here we demonstrate that AAV6.2FF-mediated expression of murine IgG2a EBOV mAbs, 2G4 and 5D2, protects from mouse-adapted (MA)-EBOV infection with none of the surviving mice developing anti-VP40 antibodies above background. Protective serum concentrations of AAV6.2FF-2G4/AAV6.2FF-5D2 did not alter endogenous antibody responses to heterologous virus infection. AAV-mediated expression of EBOV mAbs 100 and 114, and pan-ebolavirus mAbs, FVM04, ADI-15878, and CA45, as human IgG1 antibodies conferred protection against MA-EBOV at low serum concentrations, with minimum protective serum levels as low as 2 μg/mL. Vectorized expression of murine IgG2a or human IgG1 mAbs led to sustained expression in the serum of mice for >400 days or for the lifetime of the animal, respectively. AAV6.2FF-mediated mAb expression offers an alternative to recombinant antibody administration in scenarios where long-term protection is preferable to passive immunization.
更多
查看译文
关键词
adeno-associated virus (AAV),Ebola,vectored immunoprophylaxis,immunotherapy,monoclonal antibody,AAV6.2FF,filovirus
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要