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Dive into the research topics where Andrew S. Herbert is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew S. Herbert.


Nature | 2011

Ebola virus entry requires the cholesterol transporter Niemann–Pick C1

Jan E. Carette; Matthijs Raaben; Anthony C. Wong; Andrew S. Herbert; Gregor Obernosterer; Nirupama Mulherkar; Ana I. Kuehne; Philip J. Kranzusch; April M. Griffin; Gordon Ruthel; Paola Dal Cin; John M. Dye; Sean P. J. Whelan; Kartik Chandran; Thijn R. Brummelkamp

Infections by the Ebola and Marburg filoviruses cause a rapidly fatal haemorrhagic fever in humans for which no approved antivirals are available. Filovirus entry is mediated by the viral spike glycoprotein (GP), which attaches viral particles to the cell surface, delivers them to endosomes and catalyses fusion between viral and endosomal membranes. Additional host factors in the endosomal compartment are probably required for viral membrane fusion; however, despite considerable efforts, these critical host factors have defied molecular identification. Here we describe a genome-wide haploid genetic screen in human cells to identify host factors required for Ebola virus entry. Our screen uncovered 67 mutations disrupting all six members of the homotypic fusion and vacuole protein-sorting (HOPS) multisubunit tethering complex, which is involved in the fusion of endosomes to lysosomes, and 39 independent mutations that disrupt the endo/lysosomal cholesterol transporter protein Niemann–Pick C1 (NPC1). Cells defective for the HOPS complex or NPC1 function, including primary fibroblasts derived from human Niemann–Pick type C1 disease patients, are resistant to infection by Ebola virus and Marburg virus, but remain fully susceptible to a suite of unrelated viruses. We show that membrane fusion mediated by filovirus glycoproteins and viral escape from the vesicular compartment require the NPC1 protein, independent of its known function in cholesterol transport. Our findings uncover unique features of the entry pathway used by filoviruses and indicate potential antiviral strategies to combat these deadly agents.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Postexposure antibody prophylaxis protects nonhuman primates from filovirus disease

John M. Dye; Andrew S. Herbert; Ana I. Kuehne; James F. Barth; Majidat Muhammad; Samantha E. Zak; Ramon A. Ortiz; Laura I. Prugar; William D. Pratt

Antibody therapies to prevent or limit filovirus infections have received modest interest in recent years, in part because of early negative experimental evidence. We have overcome the limitations of this approach, leveraging the use of antibody from nonhuman primates (NHPs) that survived challenge to filoviruses under controlled conditions. By using concentrated, polyclonal IgG antibody from these survivors, we treated filovirus-infected NHPs with multiple doses administered over the clinical phase of disease. In the first study, Marburg virus (MARV)-infected NHPs were treated 15 to 30 min postexposure with virus-specific IgG, with additional treatments on days 4 and 8 postexposure. The postexposure IgG treatment was completely protective, with no signs of disease or detectable viremia. MARV-specific IgM antibody responses were generated, and all macaques survived rechallenge with MARV, suggesting that they generated an immune response to virus replication. In the next set of studies, NHPs were infected with MARV or Ebola virus (EBOV), and treatments were delayed 48 h, with additional treatments on days 4 and 8 postexposure. The delayed treatments protected both MARV- and EBOV-challenged NHPs. In both studies, two of the three IgG-treated NHPs had no clinical signs of illness, with the third NHP developing mild and delayed signs of disease followed by full recovery. These studies clearly demonstrate that postexposure antibody treatments can protect NHPs and open avenues for filovirus therapies for human use using established Food and Drug Administration-approved polyclonal or monoclonal antibody technologies.


The EMBO Journal | 2012

Ebola virus entry requires the host-programmed recognition of an intracellular receptor

Emily Happy Miller; Gregor Obernosterer; Matthijs Raaben; Andrew S. Herbert; Maika S. Deffieu; Anuja Krishnan; Esther Ndungo; Rohini G. Sandesara; Jan E. Carette; Ana I. Kuehne; Gordon Ruthel; Suzanne R. Pfeffer; John M. Dye; Sean P. J. Whelan; Thijn R. Brummelkamp; Kartik Chandran

Ebola and Marburg filoviruses cause deadly outbreaks of haemorrhagic fever. Despite considerable efforts, no essential cellular receptors for filovirus entry have been identified. We showed previously that Niemann‐Pick C1 (NPC1), a lysosomal cholesterol transporter, is required for filovirus entry. Here, we demonstrate that NPC1 is a critical filovirus receptor. Human NPC1 fulfills a cardinal property of viral receptors: it confers susceptibility to filovirus infection when expressed in non‐permissive reptilian cells. The second luminal domain of NPC1 binds directly and specifically to the viral glycoprotein, GP, and a synthetic single‐pass membrane protein containing this domain has viral receptor activity. Purified NPC1 binds only to a cleaved form of GP that is generated within cells during entry, and only viruses containing cleaved GP can utilize a receptor retargeted to the cell surface. Our findings support a model in which GP cleavage by endosomal cysteine proteases unmasks the binding site for NPC1, and GP–NPC1 engagement within lysosomes promotes a late step in entry proximal to viral escape into the host cytoplasm. NPC1 is the first known viral receptor that recognizes its ligand within an intracellular compartment and not at the plasma membrane.


Science | 2014

Lassa virus entry requires a trigger-induced receptor switch

Lucas T. Jae; Matthijs Raaben; Andrew S. Herbert; Ana I. Kuehne; Ariel S. Wirchnianski; Timothy K. Soh; Sarah H. Stubbs; Hans Janssen; Markus Damme; Paul Saftig; Sean P. J. Whelan; John M. Dye; Thijn R. Brummelkamp

How Lassa virus breaks and enters Lassa virus, which spreads from rodents to humans, infecting about half a million people every year, can lead to deadly hemorrhagic fever. Like many viruses, Lassa virus binds to cell surface receptors. Jae et al. now show that to enter a cell, the virus requires a second receptor, this one inside the infected cell. This requirement sheds light on the “enigmatic resistance” of bird cells to Lassa virus observed three decades ago. Although bird cells have the cell surface receptor, the intracellular receptor cannot bind the virus, stopping it in its tracks. Science, this issue p. 1506 Lassa virus entry in susceptible species involves a pH-dependent switch to a second receptor within the lysosome. Lassa virus spreads from a rodent to humans and can lead to lethal hemorrhagic fever. Despite its broad tropism, chicken cells were reported 30 years ago to resist infection. We found that Lassa virus readily engaged its cell-surface receptor α-dystroglycan in avian cells, but virus entry in susceptible species involved a pH-dependent switch to an intracellular receptor, the lysosome-resident protein LAMP1. Iterative haploid screens revealed that the sialyltransferase ST3GAL4 was required for the interaction of the virus glycoprotein with LAMP1. A single glycosylated residue in LAMP1, present in susceptible species but absent in birds, was essential for interaction with the Lassa virus envelope protein and subsequent infection. The resistance of Lamp1-deficient mice to Lassa virus highlights the relevance of this receptor switch in vivo.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis Virus Replicon Particle Vaccine Protects Nonhuman Primates from Intramuscular and Aerosol Challenge with Ebolavirus

Andrew S. Herbert; Ana I. Kuehne; James F. Barth; Ramon A. Ortiz; Donald K. Nichols; Samantha E. Zak; Spencer W. Stonier; Majidat Muhammad; Russell R. Bakken; Laura I. Prugar; Gene G. Olinger; Jennifer L. Groebner; John S. Lee; William D. Pratt; Max Custer; Kurt I. Kamrud; Jonathan F. Smith; Mary Kate Hart; John M. Dye

ABSTRACT There are no vaccines or therapeutics currently approved for the prevention or treatment of ebolavirus infection. Previously, a replicon vaccine based on Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEEV) demonstrated protective efficacy against Marburg virus in nonhuman primates. Here, we report the protective efficacy of Sudan virus (SUDV)- and Ebola virus (EBOV)-specific VEEV replicon particle (VRP) vaccines in nonhuman primates. VRP vaccines were developed to express the glycoprotein (GP) of either SUDV or EBOV. A single intramuscular vaccination of cynomolgus macaques with VRP expressing SUDV GP provided complete protection against intramuscular challenge with SUDV. Vaccination against SUDV and subsequent survival of SUDV challenge did not fully protect cynomolgus macaques against intramuscular EBOV back-challenge. However, a single simultaneous intramuscular vaccination with VRP expressing SUDV GP combined with VRP expressing EBOV GP did provide complete protection against intramuscular challenge with either SUDV or EBOV in cynomolgus macaques. Finally, intramuscular vaccination with VRP expressing SUDV GP completely protected cynomolgus macaques when challenged with aerosolized SUDV, although complete protection against aerosol challenge required two vaccinations with this vaccine.


Journal of Virology | 2016

Pan-ebolavirus and Pan-filovirus Mouse Monoclonal Antibodies: Protection against Ebola and Sudan Viruses

Frederick W. Holtsberg; Sergey Shulenin; Hong Vu; Katie A. Howell; Sonal J. Patel; Bronwyn M. Gunn; Marcus Karim; Jonathan R. Lai; Julia C. Frei; Elisabeth K. Nyakatura; Larry Zeitlin; Robin Douglas; Marnie L. Fusco; Jeffrey W. Froude; Erica Ollmann Saphire; Andrew S. Herbert; Ariel S. Wirchnianski; Calli M. Lear-Rooney; Galit Alter; John M. Dye; Pamela J. Glass; Kelly L. Warfield; M. Javad Aman

ABSTRACT The unprecedented 2014-2015 Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak in West Africa has highlighted the need for effective therapeutics against filoviruses. Monoclonal antibody (MAb) cocktails have shown great potential as EVD therapeutics; however, the existing protective MAbs are virus species specific. Here we report the development of pan-ebolavirus and pan-filovirus antibodies generated by repeated immunization of mice with filovirus glycoproteins engineered to drive the B cell responses toward conserved epitopes. Multiple pan-ebolavirus antibodies were identified that react to the Ebola, Sudan, Bundibugyo, and Reston viruses. A pan-filovirus antibody that was reactive to the receptor binding regions of all filovirus glycoproteins was also identified. Significant postexposure efficacy of several MAbs, including a novel antibody cocktail, was demonstrated. For the first time, we report cross-neutralization and in vivo protection against two highly divergent filovirus species, i.e., Ebola virus and Sudan virus, with a single antibody. Competition studies indicate that this antibody targets a previously unrecognized conserved neutralizing epitope that involves the glycan cap. Mechanistic studies indicated that, besides neutralization, innate immune cell effector functions may play a role in the antiviral activity of the antibodies. Our findings further suggest critical novel epitopes that can be utilized to design effective cocktails for broad protection against multiple filovirus species. IMPORTANCE Filoviruses represent a major public health threat in Africa and an emerging global concern. Largely driven by the U.S. biodefense funding programs and reinforced by the 2014 outbreaks, current immunotherapeutics are primarily focused on a single filovirus species called Ebola virus (EBOV) (formerly Zaire Ebola virus). However, other filoviruses including Sudan, Bundibugyo, and Marburg viruses have caused human outbreaks with mortality rates as high as 90%. Thus, cross-protective immunotherapeutics are urgently needed. Here, we describe monoclonal antibodies with cross-reactivity to several filoviruses, including the first report of a cross-neutralizing antibody that exhibits protection against Ebola virus and Sudan virus in mice. Our results further describe a novel combination of antibodies with enhanced protective efficacy. These results form a basis for further development of effective immunotherapeutics against filoviruses for human use. Understanding the cross-protective epitopes are also important for rational design of pan-ebolavirus and pan-filovirus vaccines.


eLife | 2015

Filovirus receptor NPC1 contributes to species-specific patterns of ebolavirus susceptibility in bats

Melinda Ng; Esther Ndungo; Maria E. Kaczmarek; Andrew S. Herbert; Tabea Binger; Ana I. Kuehne; Rohit K. Jangra; John A. Hawkins; Robert J. Gifford; Rohan Biswas; Ann Demogines; Rebekah M. James; Meng Yu; Thijn R. Brummelkamp; Christian Drosten; Lin-Fa Wang; Jens H. Kuhn; Marcel A. Müller; John M. Dye; Sara L. Sawyer; Kartik Chandran

Biological factors that influence the host range and spillover of Ebola virus (EBOV) and other filoviruses remain enigmatic. While filoviruses infect diverse mammalian cell lines, we report that cells from African straw-colored fruit bats (Eidolon helvum) are refractory to EBOV infection. This could be explained by a single amino acid change in the filovirus receptor, NPC1, which greatly reduces the affinity of EBOV-NPC1 interaction. We found signatures of positive selection in bat NPC1 concentrated at the virus-receptor interface, with the strongest signal at the same residue that controls EBOV infection in Eidolon helvum cells. Our work identifies NPC1 as a genetic determinant of filovirus susceptibility in bats, and suggests that some NPC1 variations reflect host adaptations to reduce filovirus replication and virulence. A single viral mutation afforded escape from receptor control, revealing a pathway for compensatory viral evolution and a potential avenue for expansion of filovirus host range in nature. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.11785.001


Viruses | 2014

Filovirus RefSeq Entries: Evaluation and Selection of Filovirus Type Variants, Type Sequences, and Names

Jens H. Kuhn; Kristian G. Andersen; Yiming Bao; Sina Bavari; Stephan Becker; Richard S. Bennett; Nicholas H. Bergman; Olga Blinkova; Steven B. Bradfute; J. Rodney Brister; Alexander Bukreyev; Kartik Chandran; Alexander A. Chepurnov; Robert A. Davey; Ralf G. Dietzgen; Norman A. Doggett; Olga Dolnik; John M. Dye; Sven Enterlein; Paul W. Fenimore; Pierre Formenty; Alexander N. Freiberg; Robert F. Garry; Nicole L. Garza; Stephen K. Gire; Jean-Paul Gonzalez; Anthony Griffiths; Christian T. Happi; Lisa E. Hensley; Andrew S. Herbert

Sequence determination of complete or coding-complete genomes of viruses is becoming common practice for supporting the work of epidemiologists, ecologists, virologists, and taxonomists. Sequencing duration and costs are rapidly decreasing, sequencing hardware is under modification for use by non-experts, and software is constantly being improved to simplify sequence data management and analysis. Thus, analysis of virus disease outbreaks on the molecular level is now feasible, including characterization of the evolution of individual virus populations in single patients over time. The increasing accumulation of sequencing data creates a management problem for the curators of commonly used sequence databases and an entry retrieval problem for end users. Therefore, utilizing the data to their fullest potential will require setting nomenclature and annotation standards for virus isolates and associated genomic sequences. The National Center for Biotechnology Information’s (NCBI’s) RefSeq is a non-redundant, curated database for reference (or type) nucleotide sequence records that supplies source data to numerous other databases. Building on recently proposed templates for filovirus variant naming [ ()////-], we report consensus decisions from a majority of past and currently active filovirus experts on the eight filovirus type variants and isolates to be represented in RefSeq, their final designations, and their associated sequences.


Cell | 2017

Antibodies from a Human Survivor Define Sites of Vulnerability for Broad Protection against Ebolaviruses

Anna Z. Wec; Andrew S. Herbert; Charles D. Murin; Elisabeth K. Nyakatura; Dafna M. Abelson; J. Maximilian Fels; Shihua He; Rebekah M. James; Marc Antoine de La Vega; Wenjun Zhu; Russell R. Bakken; Eileen Goodwin; Hannah L. Turner; Rohit K. Jangra; Larry Zeitlin; Xiangguo Qiu; Jonathan R. Lai; Laura M. Walker; Andrew B. Ward; John M. Dye; Kartik Chandran; Zachary A. Bornholdt

Experimental monoclonal antibody (mAb) therapies have shown promise for treatment of lethal Ebola virus (EBOV) infections, but their species-specific recognition of the viral glycoprotein (GP) has limited their use against other divergent ebolaviruses associated with human disease. Here, we mined the human immune response to natural EBOV infection and identified mAbs with exceptionally potent pan-ebolavirus neutralizing activity and protective efficacy against three virulent ebolaviruses. These mAbs recognize an inter-protomer epitope in the GP fusion loop, a critical and conserved element of the viral membrane fusion machinery, and neutralize viral entry by targeting a proteolytically primed, fusion-competent GP intermediate (GPCL) generated in host cell endosomes. Only a few somatic hypermutations are required for broad antiviral activity, and germline-approximating variants display enhanced GPCL recognition, suggesting that such antibodies could be elicited more efficiently with suitably optimized GP immunogens. Our findings inform the development of both broadly effective immunotherapeutics and vaccines against filoviruses.


Cell Reports | 2016

Antibody Treatment of Ebola and Sudan Virus Infection via a Uniquely Exposed Epitope within the Glycoprotein Receptor-Binding Site

Katie A. Howell; Xiangguo Qiu; Jennifer M. Brannan; Christopher Bryan; Edgar Davidson; Frederick W. Holtsberg; Anna Z. Wec; Sergey Shulenin; Julia E. Biggins; Robin Douglas; Sven Enterlein; Hannah L. Turner; Jesper Pallesen; Charles D. Murin; Shihua He; Andrea Kroeker; Hong Vu; Andrew S. Herbert; Marnie L. Fusco; Elisabeth K. Nyakatura; Jonathan R. Lai; Zhen Yong Keck; Steven K. H. Foung; Erica Ollmann Saphire; Larry Zeitlin; Andrew B. Ward; Kartik Chandran; Benjamin J. Doranz; Gary P. Kobinger; John M. Dye

Summary Previous efforts to identify cross-neutralizing antibodies to the receptor-binding site (RBS) of ebolavirus glycoproteins have been unsuccessful, largely because the RBS is occluded on the viral surface. We report a monoclonal antibody (FVM04) that targets a uniquely exposed epitope within the RBS; cross-neutralizes Ebola (EBOV), Sudan (SUDV), and, to a lesser extent, Bundibugyo viruses; and shows protection against EBOV and SUDV in mice and guinea pigs. The antibody cocktail ZMapp™ is remarkably effective against EBOV (Zaire) but does not cross-neutralize other ebolaviruses. By replacing one of the ZMapp™ components with FVM04, we retained the anti-EBOV efficacy while extending the breadth of protection to SUDV, thereby generating a cross-protective antibody cocktail. In addition, we report several mutations at the base of the ebolavirus glycoprotein that enhance the binding of FVM04 and other cross-reactive antibodies. These findings have important implications for pan-ebolavirus vaccine development and defining broadly protective antibody cocktails.

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John M. Dye

United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases

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Kartik Chandran

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Ana I. Kuehne

United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases

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Thijn R. Brummelkamp

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Anna Z. Wec

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Rebekah M. James

United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases

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Xiangguo Qiu

Public Health Agency of Canada

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Ariel S. Wirchnianski

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Jonathan R. Lai

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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