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Expression of Dengue virus envelope glycoproteins using a Measles vaccine vectorJanuary 2013 (has links)
abstract: ABSTRACT In terms of prevalence, human suffering and costs dengue infections are the most important arthropod-borne viral disease worldwide. Dengue virus (DENV) is a mosquito-borne flavivirus and the etiological agent of dengue fever and dengue hemorrhagic fever. Thus, development of a safe and efficient vaccine constitutes an urgent necessity. Besides the traditional strategies aim at generating immunization options, the usage of viral vectors to deliver antigenic stimulus in order to elicit protection are particularly attractive for the endeavor of a dengue vaccine. The viral vector (MVvac2) is genetically equivalent to the currently used measles vaccine strain Moraten, which adds practicality to my approach. The goal of the present study was to generate a recombinant measles virus expressing structural antigens from two strains of DENV (DENV2 and DENV4) The recombinant vectors replication profile was comparable to that of the parental strain and expresses either membrane bound or soluble forms of DENV2 and DENV4 E glycoproteins. I discuss future experiments in order to demonstrate its immunogenicity in our measles-susceptible mouse model. / Dissertation/Thesis / M.S. Biology 2013
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Vaccination Strategy To Protect Against Flavivirus Infection Based On Recombinant Measles VaccineJanuary 2016 (has links)
abstract: Despite the approval of a Dengue virus (DV) vaccine in five endemic countries, dengue prevention would benefit from an immunization strategy highly immunogenic in young infants and not curtailed by viral interference. Problematically, infants younger than 9 year of age, whom are particularly prone to Dengue severe infection and death, cannot be immunized using current approved DV vaccine. The most important issues documented so far are the lack of efficiency and enhancement of the disease in young seronegative recipients, as well as uneven protection against the four DV serotypes. Based on data from clinical trials that showed enhanced performance of dengue vaccines when the host has previous anti-flaviviral immunity, I proposed here an attractive solution to complement the current vaccine: a recombinant measles vaccine vectoring dengue protective antigens to be administered to young infants. I hypothesized that recombinant measles virus expressing Dengue 2 and 4 antigens would successfully induce neutralizing responses against DV2 and 4 and the vaccine cocktail of this recombinant measles can prime anti-flaviviral neutralizing immunity. For this dissertation, I generated and performed preclinical immune assessment for four novel Measles-Dengue (MV-DV) vaccine candidates. I generated four MVs expressing the pre membrane (prM) and full length or truncated (90%) forms of the major envelope (E) from DV2 and DV4. Two virus, MVvac2-DV2(prME)N and MVvac2-DV4(prME), expressed high levels of membrane associated full-length E, while the other two viruses, MVvac2-DV2(prMEsol)N and MVvac2-DV4(prMEsol)N, expressed and secreted truncated, soluble E protein to its extracellular environment. The last two vectored vaccines proved superior anti-dengue neutralizing responses comparing to its corresponding full length vectors. Remarkably, when MVvac2-DV2/4(prMEsol)N recombinant vaccines were combined, the vaccine cocktail was able to prime cross-neutralizing responses against DV 1 and the relatively distant 17D yellow fever virus attenuated strain. Thus, I identify a promising DV vaccination strategy, MVvac2-DV2/4(prMEsol)N, which can prime broad neutralizing immune responses by using only two of the four available DV serotypes. The current MV immunization scheme can be advantageus to prime broad anti-flaviviral neutralizing immunity status, which will be majorly boosted by subsequent chimeric Dengue vaccine approaches. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Microbiology 2016
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Development of novel vaccines for the concurrent immunisation against multiple dengue virus serotypesLiew, Steven Christopher January 2006 (has links)
A major obstacle to the development of dengue virus (DENV) vaccines has been the need to immunise concurrently against each of the four DENV serotypes in order to avoid sensitising recipients to developing severe DENV infections. A problem already encountered with live attenuated tetravalent DENV vaccines has been the difficulty in eliciting adequate immune responses against all four DENV serotypes in human hosts. This could have been due to variations in the antigenicity and/or the replication rates of the four DENV serotypes. Non-replicating DNA vaccines avoid the issue of different replication rates. Currently, only DENV-1 and DENV-2 DNA vaccines have been evaluated. In this study, a number of DNA vaccines for each of the four DENV serotypes were developed and their immunogenicity was evaluated in outbred mice. These vaccines included DNA vaccines encoding the DENV prM-E protein genes derived from the four DENV serotypes (pVAX-DEN1, -DEN2, -DEN3 and -DEN4), and DNA vaccines encoding DENV prM and hybrid-E protein genes derived from multiple DENV serotypes. The hybrid-E protein genes were constructed by substituting either domains I and II, domain III, and/or the stem-anchor region from the E protein of one DENV serotype with the corresponding region from another DENV serotype. A number of superior DNA vaccines against each of the four DENV serotypes were identified based on their ability to elicit high titres (≥40, FFURNT50) of neutralising antibodies against the corresponding DENV in mice. The superior DNA vaccines against DENV-1 were pVAX-DEN1, pVAX-C2M2E211, pVAX-C2M2E122 and pVAX-C2M1E122. The superior DNA vaccine against DENV-2 was pVAX-C2M1E122 and the superior DNA vaccines against DENV-3 were pVAX-DEN3 and pVAX-C2M3E344. The superior DNA vaccines against DENV-4 were pVAX-C2M3E344, pVAX-C2M4E434 and pVAX-C2M4E433. Each of these DNA vaccines could provide effective protection against infection by the corresponding DENV serotypes. This is the first study to describe the development of DNA vaccines against DENV-3 and DENV-4. However, mice immunised with a tetravalent DENV DNA vaccine, composed of a DNA vaccine encoding the prM-E protein genes from each of the four DENV serotypes (pVAX-DEN1-4), elicited high titres of neutralising antibodies against DENV-1 and DENV-3 only. Nevertheless, the results from this study suggested that a tetravalent DENV DNA vaccine, composed of pVAX-DEN1, pVAX-C2M1E122, pVAX-DEN3 and pVAX-C2M4E434, may provide effective concurrent protection against infection by each of the four DENV serotypes. In addition, mice immunised with pVAX-C2M1E122, which encoded a hybrid-E protein gene derived from DENV-1 and DENV-2, elicited high titres of anti-DENV-1 and anti-DENV-2 neutralising antibodies, and mice immunised with pVAX-C2M3E344, which encoded a hybrid-E protein gene derived from DENV-3 and DENV-4, elicited high titres of anti-DENV-3 and anti-DENV-4 neutralising antibodies. This result suggested that the co-immunisation of these two hybrid-E DNA vaccines also may provide effective concurrent protection against infection by each of the four DENV serotypes. Extracellular E proteins, believed to be in the form of recombinant subviral particles (RSPs), were recovered from the tissue culture supernatant of all DNA vaccine-transfected mammalian cells by ultracentrifugation, except for cells transfected with the pVAX-C2M2E122 hybrid-E DNA vaccine. Western blotting with the monoclonal antibody 4G2 (flavivirus cross-reactive) demonstrated that the extracellular E proteins expressed by the DNA vaccines were synthesized and cleaved in a manner similar to that of native DENV E proteins. In addition, mammalian cells transfected with pVAX-DEN1, pVAX-DEN2 or pVAX-DEN3 secreted higher amounts of extracellular E proteins than cells transfected with pVAX-DEN4. The amount of extracellular E protein secreted by pVAX-DEN4-transfected cells increased when the c-region of the prM/E signal peptidase cleavage site was made more polar. In contrast, decreasing the polarity of the c-region of the C/prM signal peptidase cleavage site of pVAX-DEN4 resulted in no detectable extracellular E proteins from pVAX-DEN4-transfected cells. This result suggested that the amount of extracellular E proteins secreted by cells transfected with DNA expressing the DENV prM-E protein genes may be dependent of the efficiency of C/prM and prM/E protein cleavages by host-derived signal peptidases. Mice immunised with the mutated pVAX-DEN4, which was capable of expressing large amounts of extracellular E proteins in vitro, produced significantly higher concentrations of Th1-type anti-DENV-4 antibodies than mice immunised with the unmodified pVAX-DEN4, but failed to produce detectable levels of anti-DENV-4 neutralising antibodies. In contrast, increasing the ratio of CpG-S to CpG-N motifs in the pVAX-DEN2 DNA vaccine by incorporating either an additional CpG-S motif, or an antibiotic resistance gene with a high ratio of CpG-S to CpG-N motifs, resulted in a significant increase in both the concentration of Th1-type anti-DENV-2 antibodies and the titres of anti-DENV-2 neutralising antibodies in immunised mice. This result suggested that increasing the amount of CpG-S motifs in DENV DNA vaccines may present an simple and effective approach to increasing the immunogenicity of the DENV DNA vaccines.
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