BackgroundEbolaviruses cause viral hemorrhagic fever with high mortality rates. Nearly all Ebola vaccines in development use Ebola glycoprotein (GP) as the immunizing antigen. GP is present on the viral membrane and functions in cell entry by binding the cellular receptor and mediating membrane fusion; antibodies to GP induce protective immunity. Ebola also produces sGP: a smaller, secreted form of GP containing the receptor-binding domain; it is also able to induce protective immunity. sGP naturally refolds after thermal denaturation and thus may be more stable than GP, and may also be more cost effective as it is produced easily in high quantities. sGP is a homodimer that is covalently linked by a cysteine near its C-terminus. In this work, we explored how modifications to sGP that affect its ability to dimerize also alter its immunogenicity.MethodssGP mutants were generated in the pCAGGS mammalian expression plasmid, and injected into mice as a DNA vaccine. Mouse sera was tested by ELISA against sGP and GP proteins, and in a neutralization assay against GP-typed pseudovirions.ResultsWe generated 4 different mutants of sGP that had altered abilities to form inter-protomer disulfide bonds. All had a mutated or deleted cysteine at position 306; two had disulfide-bonding restored by introduction of an engineered inter-protomer disulfide bond. Mice were immunized with a DNA vaccine encoding either an sGP mutant or wild-type sGP, and sera were collected. We found that sera from sGP mutants with reduced interprotomer disulfide bonds had significantly higher antibody titers to sGP and GP than sera from our wild-type sGP and engineered-disulfide sGP immunized mice. Antibody titers were similar between sGP and GP; these titers correlated with neutralization ability. Relative binding to sGP & GP (by ELISA OD) & relative % neutralization of pseudovirions at 1:10 dilution ConclusionImmunogenicity of Ebola sGP was enhanced significantly when mutations were introduced to reduce its ability to covalently dimerize. Immunogenicity correlated with induction of neutralizing antibodies, implying that our mutants may outperform wild-type sGP when used as a vaccine in vivo. This work helps paves the way for an alternative Ebola vaccine that has the potential to be more cost-effective and heat-stable than the currently-licensed vaccine.DisclosuresSamuel D. Stampfer, MD/PhD, Gilead (Shareholder)