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posted by martyb on Wednesday June 29 2016, @11:07AM   Printer-friendly
from the helps-AND-hinders dept.

Scientists at Emory Vaccine Center, in collaboration with investigators from Thailand, have found that people infected with dengue virus develop antibodies that cross-react with Zika virus.

Some of these antibodies have the potential to neutralize Zika virus -- possibly providing immune protection. At the same time, in laboratory experiments, antibodies against dengue could enhance Zika virus infection of human cells.

The results are scheduled for publication on Monday, June 27 in PNAS.

Zika virus is similar genetically to dengue virus and part of the same flavivirus family. They are both transmitted by Aedes mosquitos. Dengue is endemic in several countries currently experiencing Zika outbreak, leading to proposals that pre-existing dengue immunity is influencing the severity of the Zika epidemic.

"There are really two sides of the coin here: both cross-neutralization and antibody-dependent enhancement," says Jens Wrammert, PhD, assistant professor of pediatrics (infectious diseases) at Emory University School of Medicine and Emory Vaccine Center. "We find antibody-mediated enhancement of infection with cells in the laboratory, but we have yet to clarify what effects these antibodies have on the outcome of infection in humans."

"Zika immune responses and disease severity may be different in dengue-endemic areas, or among dengue-experienced vs dengue-naïve groups. These factors must be taken into account when doing Zika vaccine or other clinical studies."

There are four strains of dengue virus, and infection with one strain does not lead to long-lasting immunity against the other three. In fact, secondary infection with a different strain can increase the risk of developing a more severe illness, called dengue hemorrhagic fever.

This is thought to happen through "antibody-dependent enhancement": pre-existing antibodies to the first strain, unable to stop the secondary infection, instead bind to immune cells and help the new strain infect them.

Emory scientists found that a similar phenomenon occurs with Zika. Antibodies obtained from nine dengue-infected patients at Siriraj Hospital in Bangkok -- both during acute infection and after recovery -- could help Zika virus (a strain isolated in 2015 from Puerto Rico) infect immune cells in cell culture.

From Science daily ; see also the original Emery University publication.


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  • (Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 29 2016, @11:32AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 29 2016, @11:32AM (#367512)

    Lalita Priyamvada, Kendra M. Quicke, William H. Hudson, Nattawat Onlamoon, Jaturong Sewatanon, Srilatha Edupuganti, Kovit Pattanapanyasat, Kulkanya Chokephaibulkit, Mark J. Mulligan, Patrick C. Wilson, Rafi Ahmed, Mehul S. Suthar, and Jens Wrammert. Human antibody responses after dengue virus infection are highly cross-reactive to Zika virus. PNAS, June 27, 2016 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1607931113

    Also, this observation was published already (essentially the interpretation of the results in the earlier study was fatally flawed due to this cross reaction) in this comment here:
    https://soylentnews.org/comments.pl?sid=13799&cid=352741#commentwrap [soylentnews.org]

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 29 2016, @12:37PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 29 2016, @12:37PM (#367534)

    I hope they can get the best zika strain in time for the olympics.

  • (Score: 2) by Hawkwind on Wednesday June 29 2016, @05:48PM

    by Hawkwind (3531) on Wednesday June 29 2016, @05:48PM (#367653)
    There was layman's overview of this yesterday on NPR's Fresh Air http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2016/06/28/483774367/nobody-is-immune-bracing-for-zikas-first-summer-in-the-u-s [npr.org] (transcript). My understanding is there are a few related vaccines that are being targeted for modification. The interview suggested it'll still take at least a few years (clinical trials) but that it's a pretty straight forward issue.