4.5 Article

Advanced oxidation technology for the development of a next-generation inactivated West Nile virus vaccine

Journal

VACCINE
Volume 37, Issue 30, Pages 4214-4221

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2018.12.020

Keywords

West Nile virus; Hydrogen peroxide; Advanced oxidation; Vaccine; Vaccination; Antibody

Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [U01AI082196, R44AI079898]
  2. Oregon National Primate Research Center [8P51OD011092-53]

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West Nile virus (WNV) is the most frequent mosquito-borne disease reported in the continental United States and although an effective veterinary vaccine exists for horses, there is still no commercial vaccine approved for human use. We have previously tested a 3% hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-based WNV inactivation approach termed, HydroVax, in Phase I clinical trials and the vaccine was found to be safe and modestly immunogenic. Here, we describe an advanced, next-generation oxidation approach (HydroVax-II) for the development of inactivated vaccines that utilizes reduced concentrations of H2O2 in combination with copper (cupric ions, Cu2+) complexed with the antiviral compound, methisazone (MZ). Further enhancement of this oxidative approach included the addition of a low percentage of formaldehyde, a cross-linking reagent with a different mechanism of action that, together with H2O2/Cu/MZ, provides a robust two-pronged approach to virus inactivation. Together, this new approach results in rapid virus inactivation while greatly improving the maintenance of WNV-specific neutralizing epitopes mapped across the three structural domains of the WNV envelope protein. In combination with more refined manufacturing techniques, this inactivation technology resulted in vaccine-mediated WNV-specific neutralizing antibody responses that were 130-fold higher than that observed using the first generation,H2O2-only vaccine approach and provided 100% protection against lethal WNV infection. This new approach to vaccine development represents an important area for future investigation with the potential not only for improving vaccines against WNV, but other clinically relevant viruses as well. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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