Abstract

Venezuelan, eastern and western equine encephalitis viruses (EEV) can cause severe disease of the central nervous system in humans, potentially leading to permanent damage or death. Yet, no licensed vaccine for human use is available to protect against these mosquito-borne pathogens, which can be aerosolized and therefore pose a bioterror threat in addition to the risk of natural outbreaks. Using the mouse aerosol challenge model, we evaluated the immunogenicity and efficacy of EEV vaccines that are based on the modified vaccinia Ankara-Bavarian Nordic (MVA-BN®) vaccine platform: three monovalent vaccines expressing the envelope polyproteins E3-E2-6K-E1 of the respective EEV virus, a mixture of these three monovalent EEV vaccines (Triple-Mix) as a first approach to generate a multivalent vaccine, and a true multivalent alphavirus vaccine (MVA-WEV, Trivalent) encoding the polyproteins of all three EEVs in a single non-replicating MVA viral vector. BALB/c mice were vaccinated twice in a four-week interval and samples were assessed for humoral and cellular immunogenicity. Two weeks after the second immunization, animals were exposed to aerosolized EEV. The majority of vaccinated animals exhibited VEEV, WEEV, and EEEV neutralizing antibodies two weeks post-second administration, whereby the average VEEV neutralizing antibodies induced by the monovalent and Trivalent vaccine were significantly higher compared to the Triple-Mix vaccine. The same statistical difference was observed for VEEV E1 specific T cell responses. However, all vaccinated mice developed comparable interferon gamma T cell responses to the VEEV E2 peptide pools. Complete protective efficacy as evaluated by the prevention of mortality and morbidity, lack of clinical signs and viremia, was demonstrated for the respective monovalent MVA-EEV vaccines, the Triple-Mix and the Trivalent single vector vaccine not only in the homologous VEEV Trinidad Donkey challenge model, but also against heterologous VEEV INH-9813, WEEV Fleming, and EEEV V105-00210 inhalational exposures. These EEV vaccines, based on the safe MVA vector platform, therefore represent promising human vaccine candidates. The trivalent MVA-WEV construct, which encodes antigens of all three EEVs in a single vector and can potentially protect against all three encephalitic viruses, is currently being evaluated in a human Phase 1 trial.

Highlights

  • The alphavirus genus of viruses comprises arthropodtransmitted, enveloped positive-sense, single-stranded RNA viruses that includes a diverse group of at least 30 species [1]

  • Two weeks after second vaccination (Study Day 42) complete seroconversion was observed for all animals in the Modified Vaccinia Ankara (MVA)-Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEEV) and the Trivalent groups and the majority (5 of 9) of the Triple-Mix vaccinated animals exhibited a PRNT50 titer, there was a wide range in the magnitude of the responses with titers ranging from 18 to 1,550 (Figure 1A)

  • The peak PRNT50 of the monovalent MVA-VEEV [geometric mean titer (GMT) of 609] and the Trivalent (GMT 146) groups were significantly greater than the neutralizing antibody response measured for the TripleMix group (GMT 14.7), and no PRNT50 titer in control (TBS) animals was detectable at the time points assessed

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Summary

Introduction

The alphavirus genus of viruses comprises arthropodtransmitted, enveloped positive-sense, single-stranded RNA viruses that includes a diverse group of at least 30 species [1]. Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEEV), eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV), and western equine encephalitis virus (WEEV) comprise the encephalitic group that causes overt disease of the central nervous system in both equids and humans. Human infection typically results in an incapacitating disease characterized by fever, headache, lymphopenia, myalgia, and malaise [2,3,4,5]. Severe neurological disease, which includes fatal encephalitis, can occur with a fatality rate estimated to be ≤1% for VEEV, 8–15% for WEEV, and 30–70% for EEEV [4, 5]. There is concern for their use as bioweapons because of the ease of production, high infectivity, potential for aerosolization, and capacity to induce acute, febrile, incapacitating disease. Outbreaks of emerging and reemerging arboviruses, such as dengue, West Nile, chikungunya, Zika and equine encephalitis appear to become more common, such as seen with the unusually high number of EEEV cases in the US in 2019 [6]

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