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Usage Information

Quadrivalent VesiculoVax vaccine protects nonhuman primates from viral-induced hemorrhagic fever and death
Robert W. Cross, … , John H. Eldridge, Thomas W. Geisbert
Robert W. Cross, … , John H. Eldridge, Thomas W. Geisbert
Published October 22, 2019
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2020;130(1):539-551. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI131958.
View: Text | PDF
Research Article Virology

Quadrivalent VesiculoVax vaccine protects nonhuman primates from viral-induced hemorrhagic fever and death

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Abstract

Recent occurrences of filoviruses and the arenavirus Lassa virus (LASV) in overlapping endemic areas of Africa highlight the need for a prophylactic vaccine that would confer protection against all of these viruses that cause lethal hemorrhagic fever (HF). We developed a quadrivalent formulation of VesiculoVax that contains recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus (rVSV) vectors expressing filovirus glycoproteins and that also contains a rVSV vector expressing the glycoprotein of a lineage IV strain of LASV. Cynomolgus macaques were vaccinated twice with the quadrivalent formulation, followed by challenge 28 days after the boost vaccination with each of the 3 corresponding filoviruses (Ebola, Sudan, Marburg) or a heterologous contemporary lineage II strain of LASV. Serum IgG and neutralizing antibody responses specific for all 4 glycoproteins were detected in all vaccinated animals. A modest and balanced cell-mediated immune response specific for the glycoproteins was also detected in most of the vaccinated macaques. Regardless of the level of total glycoprotein-specific immune response detected after vaccination, all immunized animals were protected from disease and death following lethal challenges. These findings indicate that vaccination with attenuated rVSV vectors each expressing a single HF virus glycoprotein may provide protection against those filoviruses and LASV most commonly responsible for outbreaks of severe HF in Africa.

Authors

Robert W. Cross, Rong Xu, Demetrius Matassov, Stefan Hamm, Theresa E. Latham, Cheryl S. Gerardi, Rebecca M. Nowak, Joan B. Geisbert, Ayuko Ota-Setlik, Krystle N. Agans, Amara Luckay, Susan E. Witko, Lena Soukieh, Daniel J. Deer, Chad E. Mire, Heinz Feldmann, Christian Happi, Karla A. Fenton, John H. Eldridge, Thomas W. Geisbert

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Usage data is cumulative from July 2024 through July 2025.

Usage JCI PMC
Text version 740 125
PDF 120 34
Figure 429 8
Table 99 0
Citation downloads 89 0
Totals 1,477 167
Total Views 1,644
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