Delayed treatment of Ebola virus infection with plant-derived monoclonal antibodies provides protection in rhesus macaques

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Abstract

Filovirus infections can cause a severe and often fatal disease in humans and nonhuman primates, including great apes. Here, three anti-Ebola virus mouse/human chimeric mAbs (c13C6, h-13F6, and c6D8) were produced in Chinese hamster ovary and in whole plant (Nicotiana benthamiana) cells. In pilot experiments testing a mixture of the three mAbs (MB-003), we found that MB-003 produced in both manufacturing systems protected rhesus macaques fromlethal challenge when administered 1 h postinfection. In a pivotal followup experiment, we found significant protection (P < 0.05) whenMB- 003 treatment began 24 or 48 h postinfection (four of six survived vs. zero of two controls). In all experiments, surviving animals that received MB-003 experienced little to no viremia and had few, if any, of the clinical symptoms observed in the controls. The results represent successful postexposure in vivo efficacy by a mAb mixture and suggest that this immunoprotectant should be further pursued as a postexposure and potential therapeutic for Ebola virus exposure.

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Olinger, G. G., Pettitt, J., Kim, D., Working, C., Bohorov, O., Bratcher, B., … Zeitlin, L. (2012). Delayed treatment of Ebola virus infection with plant-derived monoclonal antibodies provides protection in rhesus macaques. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(44), 18030–18035. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1213709109

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