Abstract

BackgroundDengue virus is a mosquito-transmitted virus that can cause self-limiting dengue fever, severe life-threatening dengue hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome. The existence of four serotypes of dengue virus has complicated the development of an effective and safe dengue vaccine. Recently, a clinical phase 2b trial of Sanofi Pasteur's CYD tetravalent dengue vaccine revealed that the vaccine did not confer full protection against dengue-2 virus. New approaches to dengue vaccine development are urgently needed. Our approach represents a promising method of dengue vaccine development and may even complement the deficiencies of the CYD tetravalent dengue vaccine.Methodology/Principal FindingsTwo important components of a vaccine, the immunogen and immunopotentiator, were combined into a single construct to generate a new generation of vaccines. We selected dengue-2 envelope protein domain III (D2ED III) as the immunogen and expressed this protein in lipidated form in Escherichia coli, yielding an immunogen with intrinsic immunopotentiation activity. The formulation containing lipidated D2ED III (LD2ED III) in the absence of exogenous adjuvant elicited higher D2ED III-specific antibody responses than those obtained from its nonlipidated counterpart, D2ED III, and dengue-2 virus. In addition, the avidity and neutralizing capacity of the antibodies induced by LD2ED III were higher than those elicited by D2ED III and dengue-2 virus. Importantly, we showed that after lipidation, the subunit candidate LD2ED III exhibited increased immunogenicity while reducing the potential risk of antibody-dependent enhancement of infection in mice.Conclusions/SignificanceOur study suggests that the lipidated subunit vaccine approach could be applied to other serotypes of dengue virus and other pathogens.

Highlights

  • Dengue viruses belong to the Flavivirus genus of the Flaviviridae family and include four antigenically different serotypes of dengue virus [1]

  • We demonstrated that lipidated dengue-2 envelope protein domain III is more immunogenic than nonlipidated dengue-2 envelope protein domain III

  • Our study suggests that the lipidated subunit vaccine approach could be applied to other serotypes of dengue virus as well as other pathogens

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Dengue viruses belong to the Flavivirus genus of the Flaviviridae family and include four antigenically different serotypes of dengue virus [1]. The most advanced candidate is Sanofi Pasteur’s recombinant live, attenuated tetravalent dengue-yellow fever chimeric virus vaccine. These vaccine candidates are based on the backbone of 17D yellow fever vaccine strain, each expressing the pre-membrane and envelope genes of one of the four dengue virus serotypes [4]. The results of a phase 2b trial of this tetravalent dengue vaccine in Thai schoolchildren of 4–11 years of age were reported [5]. The existence of four serotypes of dengue virus has complicated the development of an effective and safe dengue vaccine. A clinical phase 2b trial of Sanofi Pasteur’s CYD tetravalent dengue vaccine revealed that the vaccine did not confer full protection against dengue-2 virus. Our approach represents a promising method of dengue vaccine development and may even complement the deficiencies of the CYD tetravalent dengue vaccine

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call