Publications
Science advancesAug 2023 |
9
(
31
),
eadh4057
DOI:
10.1126/sciadv.adh4057

Single-dose mucosal replicon-particle vaccine protects against lethal Nipah virus infection up to 3 days after vaccination

Welch, Stephen R; Spengler, Jessica R; Genzer, Sarah C; Coleman-McCray, JoAnn D; Harmon, Jessica R; Sorvillo, Teresa E; Scholte, Florine E M; Rodriguez, Sergio E; O'Neal, T Justin; Ritter, Jana M; Ficarra, Georgia; Davies, Katherine A; Kainulainen, Markus H; Karaaslan, Elif; Bergeron, Éric; Goldsmith, Cynthia S; Lo, Michael K; Nichol, Stuart T; Montgomery, Joel M; Spiropoulou, Christina F
Product Used
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Abstract
Nipah virus (NiV) causes a highly lethal disease in humans who present with acute respiratory or neurological signs. No vaccines against NiV have been approved to date. Here, we report on the clinical impact of a novel NiV-derived nonspreading replicon particle lacking the fusion (F) protein gene (NiVΔF) as a vaccine in three small animal models of disease. A broad antibody response was detected that included immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgA subtypes with demonstrable Fc-mediated effector function targeting multiple viral antigens. Single-dose intranasal vaccination up to 3 days before challenge prevented clinical signs and reduced virus levels in hamsters and immunocompromised mice; decreases were seen in tissues and mucosal secretions, critically decreasing potential for virus transmission. This virus replicon particle system provides a vital tool to the field and demonstrates utility as a highly efficacious and safe vaccine candidate that can be administered parenterally or mucosally to protect against lethal Nipah disease.
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