32 research outputs found

    Proposed mechanism for antigenic subversion.

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    <p>Regions of GP<sub>1,2</sub> that are shared with sGP are in red, while unshared epitopes are in green. B-cells are colored according to the regions of GP<sub>1,2</sub> and sGP against which they react. (A) A naïve animal begins with B-cells that can potentially recognize epitopes distributed throughout GP<sub>1,2</sub> and sGP. When sGP is expressed at much higher levels than GP<sub>1,2</sub>, as occurs during infection, those B-cells that recognize sGP epitopes, many of which are shared with GP<sub>1,2</sub> (red regions of sGP and GP<sub>1,2</sub>) are preferentially activated and expanded compared to B-cells that recognize unshared epitopes of GP<sub>1,2</sub> (green regions of GP<sub>1,2</sub>). Thus, sGP-reactive antibodies dominate the immune response. (B) Prior immunization by sGP. Because sGP shares over 90% of its linear sequence with GP<sub>1,2</sub>, animals primed with sGP generate anti-sGP antibodies, many of which are directed against epitopes shared with GP<sub>1,2</sub>. When these animals (or individuals who have previously been infected and recovered from EBOV infection) are boosted with GP<sub>1,2</sub>, sGP cross-reactive memory cells outnumber and express higher affinity receptors than naïve GP<sub>1,2</sub> specific B-cells, resulting in preferential expansion of these sGP-cross-reactive B-cells and a predominantly sGP-reactive immune response. (C) Prior immunization by GP<sub>1,2</sub>. Priming naïve animals with GP<sub>1,2</sub> results in antibodies largely against GP<sub>1,2</sub> epitopes not shared with sGP, presumably due to the immunodominance and high accessibility of the GP<sub>1,2</sub> mucin domain and shielding of shared epitopes. When these animals are boosted with sGP, or if they are infected with EBOV and do not have sufficiently high titers of anti-GP<sub>1,2</sub> antibodies to clear the infection rapidly, memory B-cells that recognize shared epitopes encounter their cognate antigen and expand, while non-cross-reactive GP<sub>1,2</sub>-specific B-cells are not boosted, resulting in subversion of the host immune response towards sGP cross-reactivity. (D) Successful clearance of EBOV infection. In order to avoid sGP-mediated antigenic subversion, high enough titers of non-crossreactive anti-GP<sub>1,2</sub> antibodies must be maintained to rapidly clear EBOV infection before subversion can occur.</p

    Antiserum from mice immunized against GP<sub>1,2</sub> or sGP display different reactivity patterns.

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    <p>(A) Detection by Western blot of antibodies against GP<sub>1,2</sub> and sGP from immunized mice. 50 ng of purified His-sGP and His-GP<sub>1,2</sub> were run by SDS-PAGE under denaturing conditions and probed with 1∶1000 pooled GP<sub>1,2</sub>Edit or sGPEdit antisera followed by blotting with HRP-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG. (B) Schematic of competition ELISA. Wells were coated with GP<sub>1,2</sub> and incubated with pooled antisera as well as increasing concentrations of competing antigen (sGP or GP<sub>1,2</sub>) to compete for antibodies. After two hours, plates were washed and then incubated with HRP-conjugated secondary antibody followed by addition of substrate to develop color. (C, D) Competition ELISA. Antisera from mice immunized with sGPEdit, GP-7A, GP-8A, and GP<sub>1,2</sub>Edit were diluted to give similar anti-GP<sub>1,2</sub> signal. Diluted antiserum was mixed with increasing quantities of purified His-sGP (C) or His-GP<sub>1,2</sub> (D) and incubated in His-GP<sub>1,2</sub> coated wells and developed as described above. Experiments were performed in duplicate and repeated at least three times, with representative results shown. (E, F) Competition Immunoprecipitation. Pooled antisera from GP<sub>1,2</sub>Edit-immunized mice (E) or sGP-immunized mice (F) were incubated with no GP, purified sGP or GP<sub>1,2</sub> alone, or with fixed GP<sub>1,2</sub> and increasing concentrations of sGP to compete for anti-GP<sub>1,2</sub> antibodies. GP<sub>1,2</sub> was incubated with recombinant HA as a negative control. The upper panel for the sGPEdit antisera shows the GP<sub>1,2</sub> portion of the blot at a longer exposure time to show the attenuation of signal with increasing sGP concentration. Results are representative of three independent experiments.</p

    Antigenic Subversion: A Novel Mechanism of Host Immune Evasion by Ebola Virus

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    <div><p>In addition to its surface glycoprotein (GP<sub>1,2</sub>), Ebola virus (EBOV) directs the production of large quantities of a truncated glycoprotein isoform (sGP) that is secreted into the extracellular space. The generation of secreted antigens has been studied in several viruses and suggested as a mechanism of host immune evasion through absorption of antibodies and interference with antibody-mediated clearance. However such a role has not been conclusively determined for the Ebola virus sGP. In this study, we immunized mice with DNA constructs expressing GP<sub>1,2</sub> and/or sGP, and demonstrate that sGP can efficiently compete for anti-GP<sub>12</sub> antibodies, but only from mice that have been immunized by sGP. We term this phenomenon “antigenic subversion”, and propose a model whereby sGP redirects the host antibody response to focus on epitopes which it shares with membrane-bound GP<sub>1,2</sub>, thereby allowing it to absorb anti-GP<sub>1,2</sub> antibodies. Unexpectedly, we found that sGP can also subvert a previously immunized host's anti-GP<sub>1,2</sub> response resulting in strong cross-reactivity with sGP. This finding is particularly relevant to EBOV vaccinology since it underscores the importance of eliciting robust immunity that is sufficient to rapidly clear an infection before antigenic subversion can occur. Antigenic subversion represents a novel virus escape strategy that likely helps EBOV evade host immunity, and may represent an important obstacle to EBOV vaccine design.</p> </div

    Ability of sGP to divert antibody responses against GP<sub>1,2</sub>.

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    <p>(A) Immunization study design. Female BALB/C mice were immunized IM with 50 µg of total DNA per immunization according to the schedule. Two groups of mice (n = 12) were primed and boosted as in previous experiments with either sGP Edit or GP<sub>1,2</sub> Edit in pCAGGS vector. Each group was divided in two and subgroups were boosted at week 10 with either the same construct against which they had initially been immunized, or with the opposite editing site mutant construct. (B) Comparison of antibody response against GP<sub>1,2</sub>. Sera collected at week 12 were analyzed for antibodies against GP<sub>1,2</sub> by ELISA using GP<sub>1,2</sub> as coating antigen. (C) sGP competition ELISA. The ability of sGP to compete for anti-GP<sub>1,2</sub> antibodies was determined by competition ELISA as described in <a href="http://www.plospathogens.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003065#ppat-1003065-g003" target="_blank">Figure 3B</a>. Pooled antisera were analyzed from mice immunized with sGP Edit and then boosted at week 10 with either GP<sub>1,2</sub> Edit (red), or sGP Edit (purple), and from mice immunized with GP<sub>1,2</sub> Edit and then boosted at week 10 with either GP<sub>1,2</sub>Edit (blue) or sGP Edit (green). All ELISA experiments were performed in duplicate at least three times and representative results shown. (D) Interference of EBOV GP pseudovirus neutralization by sGP. The ability of sGP to interfere with antibody-dependent neutralization was determined as in <a href="http://www.plospathogens.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003065#ppat-1003065-g004" target="_blank">Figure 4B</a>. Pooled sGP-primed, GP<sub>1,2</sub>-boosted (red) and GP<sub>1,2</sub>-primed, sGP-boosted (green) antisera were fixed at the dilution corresponding to 50% neutralization. Antisera were co-incubated with increasing dilutions of His-tagged sGP (solid markers) or His-tagged influenza PR8 HA (open markers), and rescue of infectivity was measured as described in methods. (E) Comparison of 50% neutralization titers. Antiserum titers corresponding to 50% pseudovirus neutralization activity (NT<sub>50</sub>) were calculated for week 6 (fine checkered) and week 12 (coarse checkered) mice. Error bars correspond to 95% confidence interval as determined by Student's t-test.</p

    Comparison of binding affinity of GP<sub>1,2</sub>-immunized versus sGP-immunized antisera for sGP and GP<sub>1,2</sub>.

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    <p>(A) Determining apparent K<sub>d</sub> value of antibodies from immunized mice for GP<sub>1,2</sub> and sGP. Antiserum from five mice immunized against GP<sub>1,2</sub> and five mice immunized against sGP were individually analyzed by quantitative ELISA using GP<sub>1,2</sub> (blue) or sGP (red) as coating antigen. Scatchard analysis was used to calculate apparent dissociation constants (K<sub>d</sub>). (B) Comparison of antibody affinity for GP<sub>1,2</sub> and sGP. Comparison of apparent K<sub>d</sub>'s of GP<sub>1,2</sub>-immunized and sGP-immunized polyclonal antisera for sGP (red) and GP<sub>1,2</sub>(blue) was determined by nonlinear regression analysis of Scatchard plots. K<sub>d</sub>'s for sGP and GP<sub>1,2</sub> were calculated for five individual mice in each group and values for the same animal are connected by a black line.</p

    The effect of sGP on immune response when antigen exposure mimics natural infection.

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    <p>(A) Immunization study design. Female BALB/C mice were immunized IM with 50 µg of total DNA per immunization according to the schedule shown. Mice were immunized with a 3∶1 ratio of sGP Edit∶GP<sub>1,2</sub> Edit in pCAGGS. Control groups were immunized with sGP Edit or GP<sub>1,2</sub> Edit alone plus empty pCAGGS vector to keep total amount of immunizing DNA constant. (B) Comparison of antibody response against GP<sub>1,2</sub>. Mouse sera collected at week 6 were analyzed for anti-GP<sub>1,2</sub> antibodies by ELISA using GP<sub>1,2</sub> as coating antigen. (C) sGP competition ELISA. The ability of sGP to compete for anti-GP antibodies was determined by competition ELISA as in <a href="http://www.plospathogens.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003065#ppat-1003065-g003" target="_blank">Figure 3B</a>. Pooled antisera were analyzed from mice immunized with a GP<sub>1,2</sub> Edit (blue), sGP Edit (red), or a 3∶1 ratio of sGP Edit∶GP<sub>1,2</sub>Edit (purple), and were diluted to give roughly equivalent anti-GP<sub>1,2</sub> signal. Competition ELISA was performed from antisera collected at both week 6 (light color) and week 12 (dark color) according to the immunization schedule. (D) Competition immunoprecipitation. Pooled antisera from sGPEdit+GP<sub>1,2</sub>Edit-immunized mice were incubated with no GP, purified sGP or GP<sub>1,2</sub> alone, or with fixed GP<sub>1,2</sub> and increasing concentrations of sGP to compete for anti-GP<sub>1,2</sub> antibodies. GP<sub>1,2</sub> was incubated with recombinant HA as a negative control, and precipitated and analyzed as in <a href="http://www.plospathogens.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003065#ppat-1003065-g003" target="_blank">Figure 3E,F</a>. (E) Neutralization of EBOV GP pseudovirus. Neutralizing activity of antisera was determined by incubating 500 pfu of GP<sub>1,2</sub>-pseudotyped virus with dilutions of pooled sGP+GP<sub>1,2</sub>-immunized (red), or empty pCAGGS vector-immunized (black) antisera. Neutralization was measured as decrease in luciferase expression compared to virus-only controls. (F) Interference of EBOV GP pseudovirus neutralization by sGP. The ability of sGP to interfere with antibody-dependent neutralization was determined as in <a href="http://www.plospathogens.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003065#ppat-1003065-g004" target="_blank">Figure 4B</a>. Pooled sGP+GP<sub>1,2</sub>-immunized antisera were fixed at the dilution corresponding to 80% neutralization. Antisera were co-incubated with increasing dilutions of purified sGP (red) or purified influenza PR8 HA (blue), and rescue of infectivity was measured as described in methods.</p

    Diagram of EBOV RNA editing and construction of EBOV GP mutants.

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    <p>(A) Schematic diagram of GP<sub>1,2</sub> and sGP. Membrane-bound GP<sub>1,2</sub> is encoded in the EBOV genome in two disjointed reading frames. The GP editing site is a tract of 7 A's approximately 900 nucleotides downstream of the start codon. Slippage of EBOV RNA-dependent RNA polymerase at the editing site results in insertion of an 8<sup>th</sup>-A which brings the two GP reading frames in register resulting in read-through translation of full-length membrane-bound trimeric GP<sub>1,2</sub>. Unedited transcripts contain a premature stop codon and produce truncated dimerized sGP. (B) EBOV GP and editing site mutants. Mutated nucleotides are shown in red and the primary gene products expressed by these constructs are also listed. (C) Expression of EBOV GP by wild type and mutant DNA constructs. HeLa cells were transfected with the wild type GP or editing site mutant constructs and GP expression was assayed by Western blot at 48 h post-transfection.</p

    Interference with antibody-dependent neutralization by sGP.

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    <p>(A) Neutralization of EBOV GP pseudovirus. Neutralizing activity of antisera was determined by incubating 500 pfu of GP<sub>1,2</sub>-pseudotyped virus with dilutions of pooled GP<sub>1,2</sub>-immunized (Blue), sGP-immunized (Red), and empty pCAGGS vector-immunized (black) antisera. Neutralization was measured as decrease in luciferase expression compared to virus-only controls after 48 h. (B) Interference of EBOV GP pseudovirus neutralization by sGP. The ability of sGP to interfere with antibody-dependent neutralization was determined by allowing sGP to compete with GP<sub>1,2</sub> pseudotyped viruses for anti-GP<sub>1,2</sub> antibodies. Pooled GP<sub>1,2</sub>-immunized (blue) and sGP-immunized (red) antisera were fixed at the dilution corresponding to 80% neutralization. Antisera was co-incubated with increasing dilutions of His-tagged sGP (solid markers) or His-tagged influenza PR8 HA (open markers), and rescue of infectivity was measured as described in methods.</p
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