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Herpes zoster mRNA vaccine induces superior vaccine immunity over licensed vaccine in mice and rhesus macaques

Authors :
Lulu Huang
Tongyi Zhao
Weijun Zhao
Andong Shao
Huajun Zhao
Wenxuan Ma
Yingfei Gong
Xianhuan Zeng
Changzhen Weng
Lingling Bu
Zhenhua Di
Shiyu Sun
Qinsheng Dai
Minhui Sun
Limei Wang
Zhenguang Liu
Leilei Shi
Jiesen Hu
Shentong Fang
Cheng Zhang
Jian Zhang
Guan Wang
Karin Loré
Yong Yang
Ang Lin
Source :
Emerging Microbes and Infections, Vol 13, Iss 1 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Taylor & Francis Group, 2024.

Abstract

ABSTRACTHerpes zoster remains an important global health issue and mainly occurs in aged and immunocompromised individuals with an early exposure history to Varicella Zoster Virus (VZV). Although the licensed vaccine Shingrix has remarkably high efficacy, undesired reactogenicity and increasing global demand causing vaccine shortage urged the development of improved or novel VZV vaccines. In this study, we developed a novel VZV mRNA vaccine candidate (named as ZOSAL) containing sequence-optimized mRNAs encoding full-length glycoprotein E encapsulated in an ionizable lipid nanoparticle. In mice and rhesus macaques, ZOSAL demonstrated superior immunogenicity and safety in multiple aspects over Shingrix, especially in the induction of strong T-cell immunity. Transcriptomic analysis revealed that both ZOSAL and Shingrix could robustly activate innate immune compartments, especially Type-I IFN signalling and antigen processing/presentation. Multivariate correlation analysis further identified several early factors of innate compartments that can predict the magnitude of T-cell responses, which further increased our understanding of the mode of action of two different VZV vaccine modalities. Collectively, our data demonstrated the superiority of VZV mRNA vaccine over licensed subunit vaccine. The mRNA platform therefore holds prospects for further investigations in next-generation VZV vaccine development.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22221751
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Emerging Microbes and Infections
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.10860985a51042b89c1e33835ed869db
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/22221751.2024.2309985