Prior flavivirus immunity skews the yellow fever vaccine response to cross-reactive antibodies with potential to enhance dengue virus infection

Author:

Santos-Peral AntonioORCID,Luppa Fabian,Goresch SebastianORCID,Nikolova Elena,Zaucha MagdalenaORCID,Lehmann LisaORCID,Dahlstroem Frank,Karimzadeh HadiORCID,Thorn-Seshold JuliaORCID,Winheim ElenaORCID,Schuster Ev-Marie,Dobler Gerhard,Hoelscher MichaelORCID,Kümmerer Beate M.ORCID,Endres Stefan,Schober KilianORCID,Krug Anne B.ORCID,Pritsch Michael,Barba-Spaeth GiovannaORCID,Rothenfusser SimonORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe yellow fever 17D vaccine (YF17D) is highly effective but is frequently administered to individuals with pre-existing cross-reactive immunity, potentially impacting their immune responses. Here, we investigate the impact of pre-existing flavivirus immunity induced by the tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) vaccine on the response to YF17D vaccination in 250 individuals up to 28 days post-vaccination (pv) and 22 individuals sampled one-year pv. Our findings indicate that previous TBEV vaccination does not affect the early IgM-driven neutralizing response to YF17D. However, pre-vaccination sera enhance YF17D virus infection in vitro via antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE). Following YF17D vaccination, TBEV-pre-vaccinated individuals develop high amounts of cross-reactive IgG antibodies with poor neutralizing capacity. In contrast, TBEV-unvaccinated individuals elicit a non-cross-reacting neutralizing response. Using YF17D envelope protein mutants displaying different epitopes, we identify quaternary dimeric epitopes as the primary target of neutralizing antibodies. Additionally, TBEV-pre-vaccination skews the IgG response towards the pan-flavivirus fusion loop epitope (FLE), capable of mediating ADE of dengue and Zika virus infections in vitro. Together, we propose that YF17D vaccination conceals the FLE in individuals without prior flavivirus exposure but favors a cross-reactive IgG response in TBEV-pre-vaccinated recipients directed to the FLE with potential to enhance dengue virus infection.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

EC | Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Friedrich-Baur-Stiftung

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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