The Filoviridae family contains multiple highly pathogenic viruses that cause hemorrhagic fever in humans. Outbreaks of Ebola, Sudan, Bundibugyo, and Marburg viruses are unpredictable, can spread rapidly, and occur with 40-90% human lethality. Vaccination efforts for the Zaire ebolavirus (EBOV) show tremendous promise. The candidate vaccines, however, provides no protection against the other filoviruses with equivalent outbreak potential. We and others have recently identified two epitopes on Ebola virus glycoprotein (GP) that elicit antibodies that cross- react with, neutralize, and protect against other all ebolaviruses in animal models. These epitopes are not shared with the much more abundant, secreted soluble GP (sGP), which may serve as an antibody decoy during infection. Here, we propose to use structure-guided design to engineer immunogens that preferentially display these unique GP-specific (i.e. non-sGP), critical, and highly conserved structures and elicit high levels of such broadly-neutralizing and broadly protective antibodies against these epitopes. This three-PI program combines the expertise of (1) a pioneer in the field of structure-based and epitope-focused vaccine design, (2) the structural biologist who has determined most filovirus GP-antibody structures and handles the majority of the world?s filovirus antibodies, and (3) a leading expert in filovirus vaccines and immunology. In this highly collaborative program, iterative stages of innovative design and functional evaluation will lead to novel immunogens that could be used alone or in a prime-boost regimen with single-virus vaccines currently in clinical trials. Milestones along the way demonstrate progress in provision of novel structures, design of stable and immunogenic features, and elicitation of broadly-reactive and broadly- protective immune responses against the array of filovirus threats. The proposed program is designed to deliver a vaccine with demonstrated efficacy against Zaire ebolavirus, Sudan ebolavirus, and Bundibugyo ebolavirus infections in guinea pig and ferret models as well as efficacy in NHP models of Sudan and Ebola virus infections.

Public Health Relevance

Filoviruses including Ebola, Sudan, Bundibugyo, and Marburg virus are among the deadliest viruses known. In 2014 the Ebolavirus disease outbreak was caused by the Zaire strain of Ebola virus. The current experimental vaccine that has been clinically tested is effective against Zaire strain but does not protect against other ebolaviruses. The nature of future outbreaks cannot be predicted. The goal of the proposed research is to use state of the art computational and structural biology methodologies to design an ebolavirus vaccine that protects against all different forms of ebolavirus infections.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01AI132204-04
Application #
9928893
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAI1)
Program Officer
Dupuy, Lesley Conrad
Project Start
2017-06-20
Project End
2022-05-31
Budget Start
2020-06-01
Budget End
2021-05-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Integrated Biotherapeutics, Inc.
Department
Type
DUNS #
601000750
City
Rockville
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
20850
West, Brandyn R; Moyer, Crystal L; King, Liam B et al. (2018) Structural Basis of Pan-Ebolavirus Neutralization by a Human Antibody against a Conserved, yet Cryptic Epitope. MBio 9:
Warfield, Kelly L; Howell, Katie A; Vu, Hong et al. (2018) Role of Antibodies in Protection Against Ebola Virus in Nonhuman Primates Immunized With Three Vaccine Platforms. J Infect Dis 218:S553-S564