PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Jan 2013)

Cross-reactive neutralizing antibody responses to enterovirus 71 infections in young children: implications for vaccine development.

  • Mei-Liang Huang,
  • Pai-Shan Chiang,
  • Min-Yuan Chia,
  • Shu-Ting Luo,
  • Luan-Yin Chang,
  • Tzou-Yien Lin,
  • Mei-Shang Ho,
  • Min-Shi Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0002067
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
p. e2067

Abstract

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BACKGROUND: Recently, enterovirus 71 (EV71) has caused life-threatening outbreaks involving neurological and cardiopulmonary complications in Asian children with unknown mechanism. EV71 has one single serotype but can be phylogenetically classified into 3 main genogroups (A, B and C) and 11 genotypes (A, B1∼B5 and C1∼C5). In Taiwan, nationwide EV71 epidemics with different predominant genotypes occurred in 1998 (C2), 2000-2001 (B4), 2004-2005 (C4), and 2008 (B5). In this study, sera were collected to measure cross-reactive neutralizing antibody titers against different genotypes. METHODS: We collected historical sera from children who developed an EV71 infection in 1998, 2000, 2005, 2008, or 2010 and measured cross-reactive neutralizing antibody titers against all 11 EV71 genotypes. In addition, we aligned and compared the amino acid sequences of P1 proteins of the tested viruses. RESULTS: Serology data showed that children infected with genogroups B and C consistently have lower neutralizing antibody titers against genogroup A (>4-fold difference). The sequence comparisons revealed that five amino acid signatures (N143D in VP2; K18R, H116Y, D167E, and S275A in VP1) are specific for genogroup A and may be related to the observed antigenic variations. CONCLUSIONS: This study documented antigenic variations among different EV71 genogroups and identified potential immunodominant amino acid positions. Enterovirus surveillance and vaccine development should monitor these positions.