Abstract

Arthritogenic alphaviruses cause debilitating musculoskeletal disease and historically have circulated in distinct regions. With the global spread of chikungunya virus (CHIKV), there now is more geographic overlap, which could result in heterologous immunity affecting natural infection or vaccination. Here, we evaluated the capacity of a cross-reactive anti-CHIKV monoclonal antibody (CHK-265) to protect against disease caused by the distantly related alphavirus, Ross River virus (RRV). Although CHK-265 only moderately neutralizes RRV infection in cell culture, it limited clinical disease in mice independently of Fc effector function activity. Despite this protective phenotype, RRV escaped from CHK-265 neutralization in vivo, with resistant variants retaining pathogenic potential. Near the inoculation site, CHK-265 reduced viral burden in a type I interferon signaling-dependent manner and limited immune cell infiltration into musculoskeletal tissue. In a parallel set of experiments, purified human CHIKV immune IgG also weakly neutralized RRV, yet when transferred to mice, resulted in improved clinical outcome during RRV infection despite the emergence of resistant viruses. Overall, this study suggests that weakly cross-neutralizing antibodies can protect against heterologous alphavirus disease, even if neutralization escape occurs, through an early viral control program that tempers inflammation.

Highlights

  • Alphaviruses are arthropod-transmitted, single-stranded, positive-sense enveloped RNA viruses in the Togaviridae family

  • We show that cross-reactive monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies developed after chikungunya virus (CHIKV) infection or immunization with relatively weak cross-neutralizing activity can protect against Ross River (RRV)-induced musculoskeletal disease in mice

  • The arthritogenic alphaviruses, including chikungunya (CHIKV), Ross River (RRV) and Mayaro (MAYV) viruses, cause fever, rash, and debilitating arthritis and musculoskeletal disease, with some symptoms lasting for months to years [1,2,3,4]

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Summary

Introduction

Alphaviruses are arthropod-transmitted, single-stranded, positive-sense enveloped RNA viruses in the Togaviridae family. The arthritogenic alphaviruses, including chikungunya (CHIKV), Ross River (RRV) and Mayaro (MAYV) viruses, cause fever, rash, and debilitating arthritis and musculoskeletal disease, with some symptoms lasting for months to years [1,2,3,4]. These viruses circulated in distinct regions of the world with CHIKV causing periodic outbreaks in Africa and Asia, RRV circulating in Australia and the Pacific Islands, and MAYV causing infections in Central and South America [5]. The E2 and E1 glycoproteins are the principal antigenic targets of neutralizing antibodies

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