4.8 Article

Neutralization mechanism of a highly potent antibody against Zika virus

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13679

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Funding

  1. Singapore Ministry of Education Tier 3 grant [MOE2012-T3-1-008]
  2. National Research Foundation Investigatorship award [NRF-NRFI2016-01]
  3. Ministry of Health, Singapore
  4. NIH AID [AI100625, AI 107731]

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The rapid spread of Zika virus (ZIKV), which causes microcephaly and Guillain-Barre syndrome, signals an urgency to identify therapeutics. Recent efforts to rescreen dengue virus human antibodies for ZIKV cross-neutralization activity showed antibody C10 as one of the most potent. To investigate the ability of the antibody to block fusion, we determined the cryoEM structures of the C10-ZIKV complex at pH levels mimicking the extracellular (pH8.0), early (pH6.5) and late endosomal (pH5.0) environments. The 4.0 angstrom resolution pH8.0 complex structure shows that the antibody binds to E proteins residues at the intra-dimer interface, and the virus quaternary structure-dependent inter-dimer and inter-raft interfaces. At pH6.5, antibody C10 locks all virus surface E proteins, and at pH5.0, it locks the E protein raft structure, suggesting that it prevents the structural rearrangement of the E proteins during the fusion event-a vital step for infection. This suggests antibody C10 could be a good therapeutic candidate.

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