Abstract

The development of a vaccine against congenital human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection is a major priority. The pentameric complex (PC) of virion envelope proteins gH, gL, UL128, UL130, and UL131A is a key vaccine target. To determine the importance of immunity to the homologous PC encoded by guinea pig cytomegalovirus (GPCMV) in preventing congenital CMV, PC-intact and PC-deficient live-attenuated vaccines were generated and directly compared for immunogenicity and efficacy against vertical transmission in a vertical transmission model. A virulent PC-intact GPCMV (PC/intact) was modified by galK mutagenesis either to abrogate PC expression (PC/null; containing a frame-shift mutation in GP129, homolog of UL128) or to delete genes encoding three MHC Class I homologs and a protein kinase R (PKR) evasin while retaining the PC (3DX/Δ145). Attenuated vaccines were compared to sham immunization in a two-dose preconception subcutaneous inoculation regimen in GPCMV seronegative Hartley guinea pigs. Vaccines induced transient, low-grade viremia in 5/12 PC/intact-, 2/12 PC/null-, and 1/11 3DX/Δ145-vaccinated animals. Upon completion of the two-dose vaccine series, ELISA titers for the PC/intact group (geometic mean titer (GMT) 13,669) were not significantly different from PC/null (GMT 8127) but were significantly higher than for the 3DX/Δ145 group (GMT 6185; p < 0.01). Dams were challenged with salivary gland-adapted GPCMV in the second trimester. All vaccines conferred protection against maternal viremia. Newborn weights were significantly lower in sham-immunized controls (84.5 ± 2.4 g) compared to PC/intact (96 ± 2.3 g), PC/null (97.6 ± 1.9 g), or 3DX/Δ145 (93 ± 1.7) pups (p < 0.01). Pup mortality in sham-immunized controls was 29/40 (73%) and decreased to 1/44 (2.3%), 2/46 (4.3%), or 4/40 (10%) in PC/intact, PC/null, or 3DX/Δ145 groups, respectively (all p < 0.001 compared to control). Congenital GPCMV transmission occurred in 5/44 (11%), 16/46 (35%), or 29/38 (76%) of pups in PC/intact, PC/null, or 3DX/Δ145 groups, versus 36/40 (90%) in controls. For infected pups, viral loads were lower in pups born to vaccinated dams compared to controls. Sequence analysis demonstrated that infected pups in the vaccine groups had salivary gland-adapted GPCMV and not vaccine strain-specific sequences, indicating that congenital transmission was due to the challenge virus and not vaccine virus. We conclude that inclusion of the PC in a live, attenuated preconception vaccine improves immunogenicity and reduces vertical transmission, but PC-null vaccines are equal to PC-intact vaccines in reducing maternal viremia and protecting against GPCMV-related pup mortality.

Highlights

  • Congenital infection with human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) causes considerable morbidity and occasional mortality in newborn infants that acquire infection in utero [1,2]

  • We examined the impact of the inclusion of an intact pentameric complex (PC) on vaccine efficacy using a vaccine with targeted deletions impacting immune modulation genes including a virally-encoded protein kinase R (PKR) antagonist and virally-encoded MHC-1 homologs, putative natural killer (NK) cell evasins

  • We described the generation of virus r129 by repair of a 4-bp deletion that disrupts GP129 expression and PC formation in viruses derived from bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) N13R10

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Summary

Introduction

Congenital infection with human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) causes considerable morbidity and occasional mortality in newborn infants that acquire infection in utero [1,2]. The PC promotes a mode of cell-associated spread that resists antibody neutralization, as opposed to the gH/gL/gO trimer, which is broadly required for the infectivity of cell-free virions [17]. Both PC- and trimer-specific antibodies in sera from HCMV-seropositive individuals appear to play roles in limiting infection [19,20,21], protection against congenital transmission, conferred by neutralizing antibodies targeting the PC and the trimer, is incomplete [22]

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