Novel attenuated Chikungunya vaccine candidates elicit protective immunity in C57BL/6 mice

D Hallengärd, M Kakoulidou, A Lulla… - Journal of …, 2014 - Am Soc Microbiol
D Hallengärd, M Kakoulidou, A Lulla, BM Kümmerer, DX Johansson, M Mutso, V Lulla
Journal of virology, 2014Am Soc Microbiol
Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a reemerging mosquito-borne alphavirus that has caused
severe epidemics in Africa and Asia and occasionally in Europe. As of today, there is no
licensed vaccine available to prevent CHIKV infection. Here we describe the development
and evaluation of novel CHIKV vaccine candidates that were attenuated by deleting a large
part of the gene encoding nsP3 or the entire gene encoding 6K and were administered as
viral particles or infectious genomes launched by DNA. The resulting attenuated mutants …
Abstract
Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a reemerging mosquito-borne alphavirus that has caused severe epidemics in Africa and Asia and occasionally in Europe. As of today, there is no licensed vaccine available to prevent CHIKV infection. Here we describe the development and evaluation of novel CHIKV vaccine candidates that were attenuated by deleting a large part of the gene encoding nsP3 or the entire gene encoding 6K and were administered as viral particles or infectious genomes launched by DNA. The resulting attenuated mutants were genetically stable and elicited high magnitudes of binding and neutralizing antibodies as well as strong T cell responses after a single immunization in C57BL/6 mice. Subsequent challenge with a high dose of CHIKV demonstrated that the induced antibody responses protected the animals from viremia and joint swelling. The protective antibody response was long-lived, and a second homologous immunization further enhanced immune responses. In summary, this report demonstrates a straightforward means of constructing stable and efficient attenuated CHIKV vaccine candidates that can be administered either as viral particles or as infectious genomes launched by DNA.
IMPORTANCE Similar to other infectious diseases, the best means of preventing CHIKV infection would be by vaccination using an attenuated vaccine platform which preferably raises protective immunity after a single immunization. However, the attenuated CHIKV vaccine candidates developed to date rely on a small number of attenuating point mutations and are at risk of being unstable or even sensitive to reversion. We report here the construction and preclinical evaluation of novel CHIKV vaccine candidates that have been attenuated by introducing large deletions. The resulting mutants proved to be genetically stable, attenuated, highly immunogenic, and able to confer durable immunity after a single immunization. Moreover, these mutants can be administered either as viral particles or as DNA-launched infectious genomes, enabling evaluation of the most feasible vaccine modality for a certain setting. These CHIKV mutants could represent stable and efficient vaccine candidates against CHIKV.
American Society for Microbiology