Sustained E2 antibody response correlates with reduced peak viremia after hepatitis C virus infection in the chimpanzee

71Citations
Citations of this article
26Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Immune correlates of protection against hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection are not well understood. Here we investigated 2 naive and 6 immunized chimpanzees before and after intravenous challenge, 12 weeks after the last immunization, with 100 50% chimpanzee infectious doses (CID50) of heterologous genotype 1b HCV. Vaccination with recombinant DNA and adenovirus vaccines expressing HCV core, E1E2, and NS3-5 genes induced longterm HCV-specific antibody and T-cell responses and reduced peak viral load about 100 times compared with controls (5.91 ± 0.38 vs. 3.81 ± 0.71 logs, respectively). There was a statistically significant inverse correlation between peak viral loads and envelope glycoprotein 2 (E2)-specific antibody responses at the time of challenge. Interestingly, one vaccinee that had sterilizing immunity against slightly heterologous virus generated the highest level of E2-specific total and neutralizing antibody responses as well as strong NS3/NS5-specific T-cell proliferative responses. The other four vaccinees with low levels of E2-specific antibody had about 44-fold reduced peak viral loads but eventually developed persistent infections. In conclusion, vaccine-induced E2-specific antibody plays an important role in prevention from nonhomologous virus infection and may provide new insight into the development of an effective HCV vaccine. Copyright © 2005 by the American Association far the Study of Liver Diseases.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Youn, J. W., Park, S. H., Lavillette, D., Cosset, F. L., Yang, S. H., Lee, C. G., … Sung, Y. C. (2005). Sustained E2 antibody response correlates with reduced peak viremia after hepatitis C virus infection in the chimpanzee. Hepatology, 42(6), 1429–1436. https://doi.org/10.1002/hep.20934

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free