Persistence of immunological memory as a potential correlate of long-term, vaccine-induced protection against Ebola virus disease in humans

被引:4
|
作者
Mclean, Chelsea [1 ]
Dijkman, Karin [1 ]
Gaddah, Auguste [2 ]
Keshinro, Babajide [1 ]
Katwere, Michael [1 ]
Douoguih, Macaya [1 ]
Robinson, Cynthia [1 ]
Solforosi, Laura [1 ]
Czapska-Casey, Dominika [1 ]
Dekking, Liesbeth [1 ]
Wollmann, Yvonne [3 ]
Volkmann, Ariane [3 ]
Pau, Maria Grazia [1 ]
Callendret, Benoit [1 ]
Sadoff, Jerry [1 ]
Schuitemaker, Hanneke [1 ]
Zahn, Roland [1 ]
Luhn, Kerstin [1 ]
Hendriks, Jenny [1 ]
Roozendaal, Ramon [1 ]
机构
[1] Janssen Vaccines & Prevent, Leiden, Netherlands
[2] Janssen Res & Dev, Beerse, Belgium
[3] Bavarian Nordic, Martinsried, Germany
来源
FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY | 2023年 / 14卷
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Ebola; vaccine; immunological memory; persistence; correlate; protection; 2-DOSE HETEROLOGOUS AD26.ZEBOV; OPEN-LABEL; IMMUNOGENICITY; IMMUNITY; SAFETY; REGIMEN;
D O I
10.3389/fimmu.2023.1215302
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
IntroductionIn the absence of clinical efficacy data, vaccine protective effect can be extrapolated from animals to humans, using an immunological biomarker in humans that correlates with protection in animals, in a statistical approach called immunobridging. Such an immunobridging approach was previously used to infer the likely protective effect of the heterologous two-dose Ad26.ZEBOV, MVA-BN-Filo Ebola vaccine regimen. However, this immunobridging model does not provide information on how the persistence of the vaccine-induced immune response relates to durability of protection in humans.Methods and resultsIn both humans and non-human primates, vaccine-induced circulating antibody levels appear to be very stable after an initial phase of contraction and are maintained for at least 3.8 years in humans (and at least 1.3 years in non-human primates). Immunological memory was also maintained over this period, as shown by the kinetics and magnitude of the anamnestic response following re-exposure to the Ebola virus glycoprotein antigen via booster vaccination with Ad26.ZEBOV in humans. In non-human primates, immunological memory was also formed as shown by an anamnestic response after high-dose, intramuscular injection with Ebola virus, but was not sufficient for protection against Ebola virus disease at later timepoints due to a decline in circulating antibodies and the fast kinetics of disease in the non-human primates model. Booster vaccination within three days of subsequent Ebola virus challenge in non-human primates resulted in protection from Ebola virus disease, i.e. before the anamnestic response was fully developed.DiscussionHumans infected with Ebola virus may benefit from the anamnestic response to prevent disease progression, as the incubation time is longer and progression of Ebola virus disease is slower as compared to non-human primates. Therefore, the persistence of vaccine-induced immune memory could be considered as a potential correlate of long-term protection against Ebola virus disease in humans, without the need for a booster.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Smallpox vaccine-induced antibodies are necessary and sufficient for protection against monkeypox virus
    Edghill-Smith, Y
    Golding, H
    Manischewitz, J
    King, LR
    Scott, D
    Bray, M
    Nalca, A
    Hooper, JW
    Whitehouse, CA
    Schmitz, JE
    Reimann, KA
    Franchini, G
    NATURE MEDICINE, 2005, 11 (07) : 740 - 747
  • [22] Antibodies against the Ebola virus soluble glycoprotein are associated with long-term vaccine-mediated protection of non-human primates
    Gunn, Bronwyn M.
    McNamara, Ryan P.
    Wood, Lianna
    Taylor, Sabian
    Devadhasan, Anush
    Guo, Wenyu
    Das, Jishnu
    Nilsson, Avlant
    Shurtleff, Amy
    Dubey, Sheri
    Eichberg, Michael
    Suscovich, Todd J.
    Saphire, Erica Ollmann
    Lauffenburger, Douglas
    Coller, Beth -Ann
    Simon, Jakub K.
    Alter, Galit
    CELL REPORTS, 2023, 42 (04):
  • [23] A Paradigm Shift: Vaccine-Induced Antibodies as an Immune Correlate of Protection Against Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 Genital Herpes
    Awasthi, Sita
    Friedman, Harvey M.
    JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2014, 209 (06): : 813 - 815
  • [24] Immunological memory - The role of B cells in long-term protection against invasive bacterial pathogens
    Kelly, DF
    Pollard, AJ
    Moxon, ER
    JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2005, 294 (23): : 3019 - 3023
  • [25] Antibody-mediated immunological memory correlates with long-term Lyme veterinary vaccine protection in mice
    Gutierrez, Maria de la Paz
    Huckaby, Annalisa B.
    Yang, Evita
    Weaver, Kelly L.
    Hall, Joshua M.
    Hudson, Matthew
    Dublin, Spencer R.
    Sen-Kilic, Emel
    Rocuskie-Marker, Carleena M.
    Miller, Sarah Jo
    Pritchett, Christopher L.
    Mummadisetti, Manjula P.
    Zhang, Ying
    Driscoll, Timothy
    Barbier, Mariette
    VACCINE, 2024, 42 (24)
  • [26] Immunization with vesicular stomatitis virus vaccine expressing the Ebola glycoprotein provides sustained long-term protection in rodents
    Wong, Gary
    Audet, Jonathan
    Fernando, Lisa
    Fausther-Bovendo, Hugues
    Alimonti, Judie B.
    Kobinger, Gary P.
    Qiu, Xiangguo
    VACCINE, 2014, 32 (43) : 5722 - 5729
  • [27] Long-Term Analysis of Pertussis Vaccine Immunity to Identify Potential Markers of Vaccine-Induced Memory Associated With Whole Cell But Not Acellular Pertussis Immunization in Mice
    Weaver, Kelly L.
    Blackwood, Catherine B.
    Horspool, Alexander M.
    Pyles, Gage M.
    Sen-Kilic, Emel
    Grayson, Emily M.
    Huckaby, Annalisa B.
    Witt, William T.
    DeJong, Megan A.
    Wolf, M. Allison
    Damron, F. Heath
    Barbier, Mariette
    FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY, 2022, 13
  • [28] Antibodies Are Required for Complete Vaccine-Induced Protection against Herpes Simplex Virus 2
    Halford, William P.
    Geltz, Joshua
    Messer, Ronald J.
    Hasenkrug, Kim J.
    PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (12):
  • [29] Protection against hepatitis E virus infection by naturally acquired and vaccine-induced immunity
    Zhang, J.
    Zhang, X. -F.
    Zhou, C.
    Wang, Z. -Z.
    Huang, S. -J.
    Yao, X.
    Liang, Z. -L.
    Wu, T.
    Li, J. -X.
    Yan, Q.
    Yang, C. -L.
    Jiang, H. -M.
    Huang, H. -J.
    Xian, Y. -L.
    Shih, J. W. -K.
    Ng, M. -H.
    Li, Y. -M.
    Wang, J. -Z.
    Zhu, F. -C.
    Xia, N. -S.
    CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION, 2014, 20 (06) : O397 - O405
  • [30] Vaccine-induced antibodies to herpes simplex virus glycoprotein D epitopes involved in virus entry and cell-to-cell spread correlate with protection against genital disease in guinea pigs
    Hook, Lauren M.
    Cairns, Tina M.
    Awasthi, Sita
    Brooks, Benjamin D.
    Ditto, Noah T.
    Eisenberg, Roselyn J.
    Cohen, Gary H.
    Friedman, Harvey M.
    PLOS PATHOGENS, 2018, 14 (05)