TY - JOUR
T1 - Mapping the antibody response to Lassa virus vaccination of non-human primates
AU - Enriquez, Adrian S.
AU - Avalos, Ruben Diaz
AU - Parekh, Diptiben
AU - Cooper, Christopher L.
AU - Morrow, Gavin
AU - Geisbert, Thomas W.
AU - Parks, Christopher L.
AU - Hastie, Kathryn M.
AU - Saphire, Erica Ollmann
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s)
PY - 2025/4
Y1 - 2025/4
N2 - Background: Lassa fever, caused by Lassa virus, is a severe disease, endemic in Western Africa, for which no vaccines or therapeutics are yet approved. Understanding the immune responses elicited by candidate vaccines is key for approval, including characterisation of antibody epitopes recognised and capacity for neutralisation. Methods: Here we used negative-stain electron microscopy polyclonal antibody epitope mapping (EMPEM), in-vitro pseudovirus neutralisation assays, and biophysical antibody competition assays to uncover components of polyclonal antibody responses elicited in nonhuman primates 26 days after receipt of a single immunisation with a fully protective, recombinant, replication-competent vesicular stomatitis virus-based vaccine bearing the Lassa virus glycoprotein GPC. Findings: Although the vaccinee sera are overall poorly-neutralising, we do directly visualise, within the polyclonal pool, antibodies targeting epitopes on GPC that are consistent with neutralisation, as well as competition with known neutralising mAbs. Nearly every animal, for example, produced antibodies that compete with mAbs against GP1-A and GPC-A neutralising epitopes. The most abundant classes of antibodies, however, are directed against interior interfaces of GPC, while other antibodies recognise post-fusion GPC epitopes not consistent with neutralisation. Interpretation: It may be that some individual antibodies in the pool are neutralising, but that the abundance of non-neutralising epitopes reduces potency as measured at the polyclonal level. The finding, however, neutralisation-consistent sites and competition with known neutralising antibodies are important steps in vaccine design toward eliciting more potent neutralisation. Funding: A complete list of funding bodies that supported this study is presented in the Funding section.
AB - Background: Lassa fever, caused by Lassa virus, is a severe disease, endemic in Western Africa, for which no vaccines or therapeutics are yet approved. Understanding the immune responses elicited by candidate vaccines is key for approval, including characterisation of antibody epitopes recognised and capacity for neutralisation. Methods: Here we used negative-stain electron microscopy polyclonal antibody epitope mapping (EMPEM), in-vitro pseudovirus neutralisation assays, and biophysical antibody competition assays to uncover components of polyclonal antibody responses elicited in nonhuman primates 26 days after receipt of a single immunisation with a fully protective, recombinant, replication-competent vesicular stomatitis virus-based vaccine bearing the Lassa virus glycoprotein GPC. Findings: Although the vaccinee sera are overall poorly-neutralising, we do directly visualise, within the polyclonal pool, antibodies targeting epitopes on GPC that are consistent with neutralisation, as well as competition with known neutralising mAbs. Nearly every animal, for example, produced antibodies that compete with mAbs against GP1-A and GPC-A neutralising epitopes. The most abundant classes of antibodies, however, are directed against interior interfaces of GPC, while other antibodies recognise post-fusion GPC epitopes not consistent with neutralisation. Interpretation: It may be that some individual antibodies in the pool are neutralising, but that the abundance of non-neutralising epitopes reduces potency as measured at the polyclonal level. The finding, however, neutralisation-consistent sites and competition with known neutralising antibodies are important steps in vaccine design toward eliciting more potent neutralisation. Funding: A complete list of funding bodies that supported this study is presented in the Funding section.
KW - Electron microscopy polyclonal antibody epitope mapping
KW - Lassa virus
KW - Neutralising antibody
KW - Vaccine design
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ebiom.2025.105673
DO - 10.1016/j.ebiom.2025.105673
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105001226421
SN - 2352-3964
VL - 114
JO - EBioMedicine
JF - EBioMedicine
M1 - 105673
ER -