Sustained E2 antibody response correlates with reduced peak viremia after hepatitis C virus infection in the chimpanzee
β Scribed by Jin-Won Youn; Su-Hyung Park; Dimitri Lavillette; Francois-Loic Cosset; Se-Hwan Yang; Chang Geun Lee; Hyun-Tak Jin; Chang-Min Kim; Mohamed Tarek M. Shata; Dong-Hun Lee; Wolfram Pfahler; Alfred M. Prince; Young Chul Sung
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 363 KB
- Volume
- 42
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0270-9139
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β¦ Synopsis
Immune correlates of protection against hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection are not well understood. Here we investigated 2 naive and 6 immunized chimpanzees before and after intravenous challenge, 12 weeks after the last immunization, with 100 50% chimpanzee infectious doses (CID(50)) of heterologous genotype 1b HCV. Vaccination with recombinant DNA and adenovirus vaccines expressing HCV core, E1E2, and NS3-5 genes induced long-term HCV-specific antibody and T-cell responses and reduced peak viral load about 100 times compared with controls (5.91 +/- 0.38 vs. 3.81 +/- 0.71 logs, respectively). There was a statistically significant inverse correlation between peak viral loads and envelope glycoprotein 2 (E2)-specific antibody responses at the time of challenge. Interestingly, one vaccinee that had sterilizing immunity against slightly heterologous virus generated the highest level of E2-specific total and neutralizing antibody responses as well as strong NS3/NS5-specific T-cell proliferative responses. The other four vaccinees with low levels of E2-specific antibody had about 44-fold reduced peak viral loads but eventually developed persistent infections. In conclusion, vaccine-induced E2-specific antibody plays an important role in prevention from nonhomologous virus infection and may provide new insight into the development of an effective HCV vaccine.
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