The rVSV-EBOV vaccine provides limited cross-protection against Sudan virus in guinea pigs

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41541-023-00685-z

Language of the publication
English
Date
2023-06-10
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Cao, Wenguang
  • He, Shihua
  • Liu, Guodong
  • Schulz, Helene
  • Emeterio, Karla
  • Chan, Michael
  • Tierney, Kevin
  • Azaransky, Kim
  • Soule, Geof
  • Tailor, Nikesh
  • Salawudeen, Abdjeleel
  • Nichols, Rick
  • Fusco, Joan
  • Safronetz, David
  • Banadyga, Logan
Publisher
Nature Portfolio

Abstract

Recombinant vesicular stomatitis viruses (rVSVs) engineered to express heterologous viral glycoproteins have proven to be remarkably effective vaccines. Indeed, rVSV-EBOV, which expresses the Ebola virus (EBOV) glycoprotein, recently received clinical approval in the United States and Europe for its ability to prevent EBOV disease. Analogous rVSV vaccines expressing glycoproteins of different human-pathogenic filoviruses have also demonstrated efficacy in pre-clinical evaluations, yet these vaccines have not progressed far beyond research laboratories. In the wake of the most recent outbreak of Sudan virus (SUDV) in Uganda, the need for proven countermeasures was made even more acute. Here we demonstrate that an rVSV-based vaccine expressing the SUDV glycoprotein (rVSV-SUDV) generates a potent humoral immune response that protects guinea pigs from SUDV disease and death. Although the cross-protection generated by rVSV vaccines for different filoviruses is thought to be limited, we wondered whether rVSV-EBOV might also provide protection against SUDV, which is closely related to EBOV. Surprisingly, nearly 60% of guinea pigs that were vaccinated with rVSV-EBOV and challenged with SUDV survived, suggesting that rVSV-EBOV offers limited protection against SUDV, at least in the guinea pig model. These results were confirmed by a back-challenge experiment in which animals that had been vaccinated with rVSV-EBOV and survived EBOV challenge were inoculated with SUDV and survived. Whether these data are applicable to efficacy in humans is unknown, and they should therefore be interpreted cautiously. Nevertheless, this study confirms the potency of the rVSV-SUDV vaccine and highlights the potential for rVSV-EBOV to elicit a cross-protective immune response.

Subject

  • Health

Keywords

  • Ebola virus,
  • Live attenuated vaccines

Rights

Peer review

Yes

Identifiers

PubMed ID
37301890
ISSN
2059-0105

Article

Journal title
npj Vaccines
Journal volume
8
Journal issue
1
Article number
91

Citation(s)

Cao, W., He, S., Liu, G., Schulz, H., Emeterio, K., Chan, M., Tierney, K., Azaransky, K., Soule, G., Tailor, N., Salawudeen, A., Nichols, R., Fusco, J., Safronetz, D., & Banadyga, L. (2023). The rVSV-EBOV vaccine provides limited cross-protection against Sudan virus in guinea pigs. NPJ vaccines, 8(1), 91. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41541-023-00685-z

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Collection(s)

Communicable diseases

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