Feline Infectious Peritonitis mRNA Vaccine Elicits Both Humoral and Cellular Immune Responses in Mice

Author:

Brostoff Terza1ORCID,Savage Hannah P.1ORCID,Jackson Kenneth A.1,Dutra Joseph C.2ORCID,Fontaine Justin H.2,Hartigan-O’Connor Dennis J.2,Carney Randy P.3ORCID,Pesavento Patricia A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology, Microbiology, and Immunology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA

2. Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA

3. Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA 95616, USA

Abstract

Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) is a devastating and often fatal disease caused by feline coronavirus (FCoV). Currently, there is no widely used vaccine for FIP, and many attempts using a variety of platforms have been largely unsuccessful due to the disease’s highly complicated pathogenesis. One such complication is antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) seen in FIP, which occurs when sub-neutralizing antibody responses to viral surface proteins paradoxically enhance disease. A novel vaccine strategy is presented here that can overcome the risk of ADE by instead using a lipid nanoparticle-encapsulated mRNA encoding the transcript for the internal structural nucleocapsid (N) FCoV protein. Both wild type and, by introduction of silent mutations, GC content-optimized mRNA vaccines targeting N were developed. mRNA durability in vitro was characterized by quantitative reverse-transcriptase PCR and protein expression by immunofluorescence assay for one week after transfection of cultured feline cells. Both mRNA durability and protein production in vitro were improved with the GC-optimized construct as compared to wild type. Immune responses were assayed by looking at N-specific humoral (by ELISA) and stimulated cytotoxic T cell (by flow cytometry) responses in a proof-of-concept mouse vaccination study. These data together demonstrate that an LNP–mRNA FIP vaccine targeting FCoV N is stable in vitro, capable of eliciting an immune response in mice, and provides justification for beginning safety and efficacy trials in cats.

Funder

SOCK-FIP fund at the Center for Companion Animal Health at University of California, Davis, School of Veterinary Medicine

Morris Animal Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

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