The Zika virus (ZIKV) outbreak in the Americas and South Pacific poses a significant burden on human health because of ZIKV's neurotropic effects in the course of fetal development. Vaccine candidates against ZIKV are coming online, but immunological tools to study anti-ZIKV responses in preclinical models, particularly T cell responses, remain sparse. We deployed RNA nanoparticle technology to create a vaccine candidate that elicited ZIKV E protein-specific IgG responses in C57BL/6 mice as assayed by ELISA. Using this tool, we identified a unique H-2Db-restricted epitope to which there was a CD8+ T cell response in mice immunized with our modified dendrimer-based RNA nanoparticle vaccine. These results demonstrate that this approach can be used to evaluate new candidate antigens and identify immune correlates without the use of live virus.
CITATION STYLE
Chahal, J. S., Fang, T., Woodham, A. W., Khan, O. F., Ling, J., Anderson, D. G., & Ploegh, H. L. (2017). An RNA nanoparticle Vaccine against Zika virus elicits antibody and CD8+ T cell responses in a mouse model. Scientific Reports, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-00193-w
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