Cross-Reactive and Potent Neutralizing Antibody Responses in Human Survivors of Natural Ebolavirus Infection.

Journal: Cell
Published:
Abstract

Recent studies have suggested that antibody-mediated protection against the Ebolaviruses may be achievable, but little is known about whether or not antibodies can confer cross-reactive protection against viruses belonging to diverse Ebolavirus species, such as Ebola virus (EBOV), Sudan virus (SUDV), and Bundibugyo virus (BDBV). We isolated a large panel of human monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against BDBV glycoprotein (GP) using peripheral blood B cells from survivors of the 2007 BDBV outbreak in Uganda. We determined that a large proportion of mAbs with potent neutralizing activity against BDBV bind to the glycan cap and recognize diverse epitopes within this major antigenic site. We identified several glycan cap-specific mAbs that neutralized multiple ebolaviruses, including SUDV, and a cross-reactive mAb that completely protected guinea pigs from the lethal challenge with heterologous EBOV. Our results provide a roadmap to develop a single antibody-based treatment effective against multiple Ebolavirus infections.

Authors
Andrew Flyak, Xiaoli Shen, Charles Murin, Hannah Turner, Joshua David, Marnie Fusco, Rebecca Lampley, Nurgun Kose, Philipp Ilinykh, Natalia Kuzmina, Andre Branchizio, Hannah King, Leland Brown, Christopher Bryan, Edgar Davidson, Benjamin Doranz, James Slaughter, Gopal Sapparapu, Curtis Klages, Thomas Ksiazek, Erica Saphire, Andrew Ward, Alexander Bukreyev, James Crowe