Frontiers in Immunology (Oct 2023)

An mRNA vaccine against rabies provides strong and durable protection in mice

  • Miao Li,
  • Miao Li,
  • Enyue Fang,
  • Enyue Fang,
  • Yunpeng Wang,
  • Leitai Shi,
  • Jia Li,
  • Qinhua Peng,
  • Xingxing Li,
  • Danhua Zhao,
  • Xiaohui Liu,
  • Xiaohui Liu,
  • Xinyu Liu,
  • Jingjing Liu,
  • Hongshan Xu,
  • Hongyu Wang,
  • Yanqiu Huang,
  • Ren Yang,
  • Guangzhi Yue,
  • Yue Suo,
  • Xiaohong Wu,
  • Shouchun Cao,
  • Yuhua Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1288879
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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IntroductionRabies is a serious public health problem worldwide for which an effective treatment method is lacking but can be prevented by vaccines. Current vaccines are produced in cell or egg cultures, which are both costly and time consuming.MethodsHere, a non-replicating mRNA vaccine (RV021) encoding the rabies virus glycoprotein was developed in vitro, and its immunogenicity and protective efficacy against live virus was evaluated in mice.ResultsA two-dose vaccination with 1 μg of RV021 at 7-day intervals induced a protective level of neutralizing antibody that was maintained for at least 260 days. RV021 induced a robust cellular immune response that was significantly superior to that of an inactivated vaccine. Two doses of 1 μg RV021 provided full protection against challenge with CVS of 30~60-fold lethal dose, 50%. Vaccine potency testing (according to the National Institutes of Health) in vivo revealed that the potency of RV021 at 15 μg/dose was 7.5 IU/dose, which is substantially higher than the standard for lot release of rabies vaccines for current human use.ConclusionThe mRNA vaccine RV021 induces a strong protective immune response in mice, providing a new and promising strategy for human rabies prevention and control.

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