Potent neutralization of Marburg virus by a vaccine-elicited monoclonal antibody

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Potent neutralization of Marburg virus by a vaccine-elicited monoclonal antibody

Authors

Addetia, A.; Perruzza, L.; Park, Y.-J.; McCallum, M.; Stewart, C.; Brown, J. T.; Donati, A.; Culap, K.; Balmelli, A.; Gazi, M.; Carrion, R.; Corti, D.; Benigni, F.; Veesler, D.

Abstract

Marburg virus (MARV) is a filovirus that causes a severe and often lethal hemorrhagic fever. Despite the increasing frequency of MARV outbreaks, no vaccines or therapeutics are licensed for use in humans. Here, we designed mutations that improve the expression and thermostability of the prefusion MARV glycoprotein (GP) ectodomain trimer, which is the sole target of neutralizing antibodies and vaccines in development. We discovered a fully human monoclonal antibody, MARV16, that broadly neutralizes all MARV isolates as well as Ravn virus and Dehong virus with 40 to 100-fold increased potency relative to previously described antibodies. We determined a cryo-electron microscopy structure of MARV16-bound MARV GP showing that MARV16 recognizes a prefusion-specific epitope spanning GP1 and GP2, blocking receptor binding and preventing conformational changes required for viral entry. We further reveal the architecture of the MARV GP glycan cap, which shields the receptor binding site (RBS), underscoring architectural similarities with distantly related filovirus GPs. MARV16 and previously identified RBS-directed antibodies can bind MARV GP simultaneously, paving the way for a MARV therapeutic antibody cocktail. MARV GP stabilization along with the discovery of a potent neutralizing antibody will advance treatment and prevention options for MARV.

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