Abstract

Vaccinia virus protein A33 (A33VACV) plays an important role in protection against orthopoxviruses, and hence is included in experimental multi-subunit smallpox vaccines. In this study we show that single-dose vaccination with recombinant Sindbis virus expressing A33VACV, is sufficient to protect mice against lethal challenge with vaccinia virus WR (VACV-WR) and ectromelia virus (ECTV) but not against cowpox virus (CPXV), a closely related orthopoxvirus. Moreover, a subunit vaccine based on the cowpox virus A33 ortholog (A33CPXV) failed to protect against cowpox and only partially protected mice against VACV-WR challenge. We mapped regions of sequence variation between A33VACV and A33CPXVand analyzed the role of such variations in protection. We identified a single protective region located between residues 104–120 that harbors a putative H-2Kd T cell epitope as well as a B cell epitope - a target for the neutralizing antibody MAb-1G10 that blocks spreading of extracellular virions. Both epitopes in A33CPXV are mutated and predicted to be non-functional. Whereas vaccination with A33VACV did not induce in-vivo CTL activity to the predicted epitope, inhibition of virus spread in-vitro, and protection from lethal VACV challenge pointed to the B cell epitope highlighting the critical role of residue L118 and of adjacent compensatory residues in protection. This epitope’s critical role in protection, as well as its modifications within the orthopoxvirus genus should be taken in context with the failure of A33 to protect against CPXV as demonstrated here. These findings should be considered when developing new subunit vaccines and monoclonal antibody based therapeutics against orthopoxviruses, especially variola virus, the etiologic agent of smallpox.

Highlights

  • Variola virus, the causative agent of smallpox, was eradicated following a world-wide vaccination campaign, launched by the WHO [1]

  • In the present study we evaluated the applicability of a Sindbis-virus based vector for the evaluation of the protective efficacy of A33VACV

  • Previous reports demonstrated the protective capacity of A33 against different orthopoxviruses such as vaccinia virus WR (VACV-WR), ectromelia virus (ECTV) and monkeypox virus (MPXV) [3,4,5,6,7,8,13]

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Summary

Introduction

The causative agent of smallpox, was eradicated following a world-wide vaccination campaign, launched by the WHO [1]. Conserved antigens (>97% sequence similarity) within the orthopoxvirus genus, allowed to achieve cross protection against variola virus by immunization with vaccinia virus (VACV) vaccine strains. The approach of using protective VACV antigens is pursued by several labs, aiming at generating an efficacious and safe subunit vaccine. In this regard, A33 antigen is one of the most studied and promising candidates [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]

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