This study was undertaken to evaluate the feasibility of using recombinant dengue proteins to discriminate between acute dengue infections versus uninfected dengue samples. Dengue virus proteins E, NS1, NS3, and NS4B were cloned as fusion proteins and expressed in Escherichia coli. Recombinant products were tested in 100 serum samples obtained from acute dengue fever cases collected from 3 states of Mexico where dengue is endemic. Sera from 75 healthy individuals living in nonendemic areas for dengue were used as a control group. In sera from the dengue patients group, antibody responses to E protein were demonstrated in 91% of cases and NS1 protein was recognized to various extents (99%) within the first 7 days of infection. The antibody responses to NS3 and NS4B were frequently of low magnitude. Consistent negative antibody responses to all proteins were found in sera from the control group. These data suggest that the glutathione-S-transferase (GST)-dengue fusion proteins may be feasible antigens for a sensitive and specific serological assay.
DNA priming-protein boosting is a strategy used to establish strong immunity to a specific pathogen by the use of two different antigens through sequential delivery systems. In this work, two recombinant plasmids were used, one encoding for the dengue virus E protein, which is know to induce neutralizing antibodies (pcDNA 3.1/E), and the other encoding for the Dengue virus nonstructural protein 1 (pcDNA 3.1/NS1), as a source of B- and T-cell epitopes possibly involved in protective immunity. We showed that immunization of BALB/c mice with three priming doses of both plasmids pcDNA 3.1/E and/or pcDNA 3.1/NS1 were able to induce antibody responses to E protein with a single plasmid; in contrast to the antibody response to NS1 protein we observed an additive effect in terms of antibody response. Moreover, using a prime-boost protocol in which both plasmid constructs were co-administrated followed by a boost of homologous GST-E and GST-NS1 recombinant proteins, we observed an increased antibody response to NS1 and to E protein compared to animals vaccinated with the proteins or with dengue constructs alone. If neutralizing antibodies play an important role in dengue infection, antibodies generated with this regimen was also significantly better than the administration of the mix of proteins alone. These results suggest that NS1 and E proteins together could be considered in a design of subunit recombinant vaccines.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.