Abstract

BackgroundFour antigenically distinct serotypes (1–4) of dengue viruses (DENVs) cause dengue disease. Antibodies to any one DENV serotype have the potential to predispose an individual to more severe disease upon infection with a different DENV serotype. A dengue vaccine must elicit homotypic neutralizing antibodies to all four DENV serotypes to avoid the risk of such antibody-dependent enhancement in the vaccine recipient. This is a formidable challenge as evident from the lack of protective efficacy against DENV-2 by a tetravalent live attenuated dengue vaccine that has completed phase III trials recently. These trial data underscore the need to explore non-replicating subunit vaccine alternatives. Recently, using the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris, we showed that DENV-2 and DENV-3 envelope (E) glycoproteins, expressed in absence of prM, implicated in causing severe dengue disease, self-assemble into virus-like particles (VLPs), which elicit predominantly virus-neutralizing antibodies and confer significant protection against lethal DENV challenge in an animal model. The current study extends this work to a third DENV serotype.ResultsWe cloned and expressed DENV-1 E antigen in P. pastoris, and purified it to near homogeneity. Recombinant DENV-1 E underwent post-translational processing, namely, signal peptide cleavage and glycosylation. Purified DENV-1 E self-assembled into stable VLPs, based on electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering analysis. Epitope mapping with monoclonal antibodies revealed that the VLPs retained the overall antigenic integrity of the virion particles despite the absence of prM. Subtle changes accompanied the efficient display of E domain III (EDIII), which contains type-specific neutralizing epitopes. These VLPs were immunogenic, eliciting predominantly homotypic EDIII-directed DENV-1-specific neutralizing antibodies.ConclusionsThis work demonstrates the inherent potential of P. pastoris-expressed DENV-1 E glycoprotein to self-assemble into VLPs eliciting predominantly homotypic neutralizing antibodies. This work justifies an investigation of the last remaining serotype, namely, DENV-4, to assess if it also shares the desirable vaccine potential manifested by the remaining three DENV serotypes. Such efforts could make it possible to envisage the development of a tetravalent dengue vaccine based on VLPs of P. pastoris-expressed E glycoproteins of the four DENV serotypes.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12896-016-0280-y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Four antigenically distinct serotypes (1–4) of dengue viruses (DENVs) cause dengue disease

  • This work demonstrates the inherent potential of P. pastoris-expressed DENV-1 E glycoprotein to self-assemble into Virus like Particle (VLP) eliciting predominantly homotypic neutralizing antibodies

  • This work justifies an investigation of the last remaining serotype, namely, DENV-4, to assess if it shares the desirable vaccine potential manifested by the remaining three DENV serotypes. Such efforts could make it possible to envisage the development of a tetravalent dengue vaccine based on VLPs of P. pastoris-expressed E glycoproteins of the four DENV serotypes

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Summary

Introduction

Four antigenically distinct serotypes (1–4) of dengue viruses (DENVs) cause dengue disease. A dengue vaccine must elicit homotypic neutralizing antibodies to all four DENV serotypes to avoid the risk of such antibody-dependent enhancement in the vaccine recipient This is a formidable challenge as evident from the lack of protective efficacy against DENV-2 by a tetravalent live attenuated dengue vaccine that has completed phase III trials recently. To preclude the possibility of such antibody-mediated enhancement (ADE) of dengue disease, it is believed that a safe dengue vaccine must be ‘tetravalent’, affording simultaneous type-specific (homotypic) protection against each of the four DENV serotypes. Efforts to understand this, using a mouse model of ADE, strongly suggest that while homotypic neutralizing antibodies do not cause ADE, heterotypic neutralizing antibodies do, at certain concentrations [12] This underscores the requirement for a dengue vaccine to elicit homotypic neutralizing antibodies to each of the four prevalent DENV serotypes to be both safe and efficacious

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