Nature Communications (Feb 2025)

Broadly neutralizing antibodies isolated from HEV convalescents confer protective effects in human liver-chimeric mice

  • George Ssebyatika,
  • Katja Dinkelborg,
  • Luisa J. Ströh,
  • Florian Hinte,
  • Laura Corneillie,
  • Lucas Hueffner,
  • Elina M. Guzman,
  • Prossie L. Nankya,
  • Nina Plückebaum,
  • Lukas Fehlau,
  • Jonathan Garn,
  • Nele Meyer,
  • Sarah Prallet,
  • Ann-Kathrin Mehnert,
  • Anke R. M. Kraft,
  • Lieven Verhoye,
  • Carina Jacobsen,
  • Eike Steinmann,
  • Heiner Wedemeyer,
  • Abel Viejo-Borbolla,
  • Viet Loan Dao Thi,
  • Thomas Pietschmann,
  • Marc Lütgehetmann,
  • Philip Meuleman,
  • Maura Dandri,
  • Thomas Krey,
  • Patrick Behrendt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-57182-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Hepatitis E virus (HEV) causes 3.3 million symptomatic cases and 44,000 deaths per year. Chronic infections can arise in immunocompromised individuals, and pregnant women may suffer from fulminant disease as a consequence of HEV infection. Despite these important implications for public health, no specific antiviral treatment has been approved to date. Here, we report combined functional, biochemical, and X-ray crystallographic studies that characterize the human antibody response in convalescent HEV patients. We identified a class of potent and broadly neutralizing human antibodies (bnAbs), targeting a quaternary epitope located at the tip of the HEV capsid protein pORF2 that contains an N-glycosylation motif and is conserved across members of the Hepeviridae. These glycan-sensitive bnAbs specifically recognize the non-glycosylated pORF2 present in infectious particles but not the secreted glycosylated form acting as antibody decoy. Our most potent bnAb protects human liver-chimeric mice from intraperitoneal HEV challenge and co-housing exposure. These results provide insights into the bnAb response to this important emerging pathogen and support the development of glycan-sensitive antibodies to combat HEV infection.