Fighting Virus With Virus

A small pre-clinical trial suggests that the virus-like particles of the Kunjin virus could be used as an Ebola vaccine.

AsianScientist (Mar. 10, 2015) – An experimental Ebola vaccine made using an Australian virus called Kunjin might help in the fight against the deadly Ebola virus, according to a study published in The Journal of Infectious Diseases.

Lead researcher Professor Alexander Khromykh, from the University of Queensland, said the researchers from Australia, France and Russia found the engineered vaccine gave significant protection from Ebola infection.

“We immunized four African green monkeys with a vaccine made from the Kunjin virus engineered to produce an Ebola virus protein,” Khromykh said. “We vaccinated them twice in an interval of four weeks, before challenging them with a dose of the Ebola virus three weeks later.”

“Three out of the four, or 75 percent of the animals that were immunized, were completely protected against the Ebola virus challenge.”

Khromykh said further tests in a larger number of monkeys would be conducted before proceeding to Phase I clinical trials in human volunteers.

Co-author Professor Andreas Suhrbier, from QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, said there were only a few Ebola vaccine candidates that had worked in non-human primates.

“Our results are therefore an impressive achievement in the global battle against this deadly virus,” he said.

The Ebola virus, responsible for a severe form of viral haemorrhagic fever in humans, with fatality rates up to 90 percent, was first documented in 1976 in Africa, in Zaire (now Democratic Republic of Congo) and Sudan. Outbreaks have since been reported in Central Africa, with the largest ever outbreak recorded starting in 2014 in West Africa and reaching about 23,900 cases and 9700 deaths (as of 2 March 2015).

“The large scale of this ongoing outbreak in West Africa has triggered the urgent need for an effective vaccine,” Khromykh said.

“This is particularly so for Ebola crisis responders such as health care workers, as well as other groups such as those sharing accommodation with known or suspected infected individuals.”

The Kunjin virus-derived vaccine vector was first constructed by Khromykh in 1997 and since then has been used to develop several vaccine candidates, including the current Ebola vaccine candidate.

The article can be found at: Pyankov et al. (2015) A Kunjin Replicon Virus-like Particle Vaccine Provides Protection Against Ebola Virus Infection in Nonhuman Primates.

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Source: University of Queensland.
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