EBioMedicine (Aug 2022)
Replicating RNA vaccination elicits an unexpected immune response that efficiently protects mice against lethal Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus challenge
Abstract
Summary: Background: Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus is the cause of a severe hemorrhagic fever with cases reported throughout a wide-geographic region. Spread by the bite of infected ticks, contact with infected livestock or in the health care setting, disease begins as a non-specific febrile illness that can rapidly progress to hemorrhagic manifestations. Currently, there are no approved vaccines and antivirals such as ribavirin have unclear efficacy. Thus treatment is mostly limited to supportive care. Methods: In this report we evaluated an alphavirus-based replicon RNA vaccine expressing either the CCHFV nucleoprotein or glycoprotein precursor in a stringent, heterologous lethal challenge mouse model. Findings: Vaccination with the RNA expressing the nucleoprotein alone could confer complete protection against clinical disease, but vaccination with a combination of both the nucleoprotein and glycoprotein precursor afforded robust protection against disease and viral replication. Protection from lethal challenge required as little as a single immunization with 100ng of RNA. Unexpectedly, analysis of the immune responses elicited by the vaccine components showed that vaccination resulted in antibodies against the internal viral nucleoprotein and cellular immunity against the virion-exposed glycoproteins. Interpretation: Cumulatively this vaccine conferred robust protection against Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus and supports continued development of this vaccine candidate. Funding: This research was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the NIAID/NIH and HDT Bio.