npj Vaccines (Oct 2023)

A recombinant virus-like particle vaccine against adenovirus-7 induces a potent humoral response

  • Ryan Mazboudi,
  • Hannah Mulhall Maasz,
  • Matthew D. Resch,
  • Ke Wen,
  • Paul Gottlieb,
  • Aleksandra Alimova,
  • Reza Khayat,
  • Natalie D. Collins,
  • Robert A. Kuschner,
  • Jose M. Galarza

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41541-023-00754-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Adenoviruses (AdVs) cause infections in humans that range from mild to severe, and can cause outbreaks particularly in close contact settings. Several human AdV types have been identified, which can cause a wide array of clinical manifestations. AdV types 4 and 7 (AdV-4 and AdV-7), which are among the most commonly circulating types in the United States, are known to cause acute respiratory disease that can result in hospitalization and rarely, death. Currently, the only vaccines approved for use in humans are live virus vaccines against AdV-4 and AdV-7, though these vaccines are only authorized for use in U.S. military personnel. While they are efficacious, use of these live virus vaccines carries considerable risks of vaccine-associated viral shedding and recombination. Here, we present an alternative vaccination strategy against AdV-7 using the virus-like particle platform (AdVLP-7). We describe the production of stable recombinant AdVLP-7, and demonstrate that AdVLP-7 is structurally analogous to wild-type AdV-7 virions (WT AdV-7). Preclinical immunogenicity studies in mice show that AdVLP-7 elicits a potent humoral immune response, comparable to that observed in mice immunized with WT AdV-7. Specifically, AdVLP-7 induces high titers of antibodies against AdV-7-specific antigens that can effectively neutralize AdV-7.