Abstract

The newly emerged mosquito-borne Zika virus poses a major public challenge due to its ability to cause significant birth defects and neurological disorders. The impact of sexual transmission is unclear but raises further concerns about virus dissemination. No specific treatment or vaccine is currently available, thus the development of a safe and effective vaccine is paramount. Here we describe a novel strategy to assemble Zika virus-like particles (VLPs) by co-expressing the structural (CprME) and non-structural (NS2B/NS3) proteins, and demonstrate their effectiveness as vaccines. VLPs are produced in a suspension culture of mammalian cells and self-assembled into particles closely resembling Zika viruses as shown by electron microscopy studies. We tested various VLP vaccines and compared them to analogous compositions of an inactivated Zika virus (In-ZIKV) used as a reference. VLP immunizations elicited high titers of antibodies, as did the In-ZIKV controls. However, in mice the VLP vaccine stimulated significantly higher virus neutralizing antibody titers than comparable formulations of the In-ZIKV vaccine. The serum neutralizing activity elicited by the VLP vaccine was enhanced using a higher VLP dose and with the addition of an adjuvant, reaching neutralizing titers greater than those detected in the serum of a patient who recovered from a Zika infection in Brazil in 2015. Discrepancies in neutralization levels between the VLP vaccine and the In-ZIKV suggest that chemical inactivation has deleterious effects on neutralizing epitopes within the E protein. This along with the inability of a VLP vaccine to cause infection makes it a preferable candidate for vaccine development.

Highlights

  • Zika fever results from an infection with the Zika virus (ZIKV), which is transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected Aedes mosquito

  • This work describes a novel strategy for the development of a virus-like particle (VLP) based Zika vaccine and shows its effectiveness when tested in a murine model

  • Our results show feasibility for the rapid development of a safe and potentially highly effective VLP based Zika vaccine for humans

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Summary

Introduction

Zika fever results from an infection with the Zika virus (ZIKV), which is transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected Aedes mosquito (primarily A. aegypti). The ZIKV has been transmitted in Africa for many years through a sylvatic cycle between mosquito vectors and nonhuman primates, with occasional human infections [2]. An increase in cases of Guillain-Barre syndrome has been observed following ZIKV infection [9]. The seriousness of these disorders imposes a tremendous burden on public health. In addition to vector transmission, ZIKV is transmitted via sexual contact [10, 11], and by body fluid [12,13,14] These facts taken together with its often-asymptomatic nature makes disease control even more difficult

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