Konstantin V. Pugachev
Sanofi Pasteur
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Featured researches published by Konstantin V. Pugachev.
Nature Medicine | 2003
Richard Weltzin; Jian Liu; Konstantin V. Pugachev; Gwendolyn A. Myers; Brie Coughlin; Paul S. Blum; Richard D. Nichols; Casey Johnson; John Cruz; Jeffrey S. Kennedy; Francis A. Ennis; Thomas P. Monath
Although the smallpox virus was eradicated over 20 years ago, its potential release through bioterrorism has generated renewed interest in vaccination. To develop a modern smallpox vaccine, we have adapted vaccinia virus that was derived from the existing Dryvax vaccine for growth in a human diploid cell line. We characterized six cloned and one uncloned vaccine candidates. One clone, designated ACAM1000, was chosen for development based on its comparability to Dryvax when tested in mice, rabbits and monkeys for virulence and immunogenicity. By most measures, ACAM1000 was less virulent than Dryvax. We compared ACAM1000 and Dryvax in a randomized, double-blind human clinical study. The vaccines were equivalent in their ability to produce major cutaneous reactions (takes) and to induce neutralizing antibody and cell-mediated immunity against vaccinia virus.
International Journal for Parasitology | 2003
Konstantin V. Pugachev; Farshad Guirakhoo; Dennis W. Trent; Thomas P. Monath
Yellow fever, dengue, Japanese encephalitis and tick-borne encephalitis viruses are the medically most important members of the Flavivirus genus composed primarily of arboviruses. In this paper, we review the commercially available traditional flavivirus vaccines against yellow fever, Japanese encephalitis, and tick-borne encephalitis, as well as modern approaches to flavivirus vaccines. Formalin inactivation technology has been employed to produce killed vaccines. Flaviviruses have been attenuated by multiple passages in animal tissues and cell cultures to produce empirical live attenuated vaccines. The use of traditional methods is being pursued to develop vaccines against other flavivirus diseases, such as dengue, and to improve existing vaccines, such as for Japanese encephalitis. With the recent development of infectious clones, rational approaches to attenuated flavivirus vaccines have employed the introduction of specific mutations into wild type viruses and chimerisation between different viruses. Novel methods for delivery of live vaccines, such as inoculation of infectious DNA or RNA, have been described. Other approaches, such as the construction of protein subunit, expression vector-based and naked DNA vaccines, have been proposed to create alternate vaccine candidates.
Vaccine | 2002
Konstantin V. Pugachev; Simeon W. Ocran; Farshad Guirakhoo; Dean Furby; Thomas P. Monath
Consensus sequencing of the genome of the ARILVAX live attenuated yellow fever (YF) 17D vaccine was performed directly on reconstituted virus from a vial of the vaccine secondary seed (without plaque-purification or cloning of cDNA). The genome of ARILVAX was identical in organization and size (10,862 nucleotides (nt)) to other published YF 17D sequences. A total of 12 nt heterogeneities were detected indicating that the vaccine is a heterogeneous population. Some of these indicated the presence of quasispecies with residues not reported previously for other sequenced YF 17D strains. A number of nts clearly differed from some YF vaccine strain sequences but coincided with the others, which could be due to the use of consensus sequencing approach in this study. Most (but not all) of the heterogeneities and nt differences were silent (i.e. did not result in an amino acid change). The differences are inconsequential to safety and effectiveness of ARILVAX. Other YF 17D vaccines are undoubtedly also heterogeneous and need to be re-examined using the consensus approach.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Alexander A. Rumyantsev; Ana P. Goncalvez; Maryann Giel-Moloney; John Catalan; Yuxi Liu; Qing-sheng Gao; Jeff Almond; Harry Kleanthous; Konstantin V. Pugachev
Tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus is the most important human pathogen transmitted by ticks in Eurasia. Inactivated vaccines are available but require multiple doses and frequent boosters to induce and maintain immunity. Thus far, the goal of developing a safe, live attenuated vaccine effective after a single dose has remained elusive. Here we used a replication-defective (single-cycle) flavivirus platform, RepliVax, to generate a safe, single-dose TBE vaccine. Several RepliVax-TBE candidates attenuated by a deletion in the capsid gene were constructed using different flavivirus backbones containing the envelope genes of TBE virus. RepliVax-TBE based on a West Nile virus backbone (RV-WN/TBE) grew more efficiently in helper cells than candidates based on Langat E5, TBE, and yellow fever 17D backbones, and was found to be highly immunogenic and efficacious in mice. Live chimeric yellow fever 17D/TBE, Dengue 2/TBE, and Langat E5/TBE candidates were also constructed but were found to be underattenuated. RV-WN/TBE was demonstrated to be highly immunogenic in Rhesus macaques after a single dose, inducing a significantly more durable humoral immune response compared with three doses of a licensed, adjuvanted human inactivated vaccine. Its immunogenicity was not significantly affected by preexisting immunity against WN. Immunized monkeys were protected from a stringent surrogate challenge. These results support the identification of a single-cycle TBE vaccine with a superior product profile to existing inactivated vaccines, which could lead to improved vaccine coverage and control of the disease.
Virology | 2010
Alexander A. Rumyantsev; Zhen-xi Zhang; Qing-sheng Gao; Nicolas Moretti; Nathan Brown; Harold Kleanthous; Simon Delagrave; Farshad Guirakhoo; Marc S. Collett; Konstantin V. Pugachev
A live chimeric vaccine virus against Japanese encephalitis (JE), ChimeriVax-JE, was used to define methods for optimal, random insertion of foreign immunologic determinants into flavivirus glycoproteins. The conserved M2e peptide of influenza A virus was randomly inserted into the yellow fever-specific NS1 glycoprotein of ChimeriVax-JE. A technique combining plaque purification with immunostaining yielded a recombinant virus that stably expressed M2e at NS1-236 site. The site was found permissive for other inserts. The insertion inhibited NS1 dimerization in vitro, which had no significant effect on virus replication in vitro and immunogenicity in vivo. Two different NS1-specific monoclonal antibodies and a polyclonal antibody efficiently recognized only the NS1 protein dimer, but not monomer. Adaptation of the virus to Vero cells resulted in two amino acid changes upstream from the insert which restored NS1 dimerization. Immunized mice developed high-titer M2e-specific antibodies predominantly of the IgG2A isotype indicative of a Th1-biased response.
Vaccine | 2011
Alexander A. Rumyantsev; Maryann Giel-Moloney; Yuxi Liu; Qing-sheng Gao; Zhen-xi Zhang; John Catalan; Ilya Frolov; Jeff Almond; Harold Kleanthous; Konstantin V. Pugachev
RepliVax, a novel replication-defective vaccine platform has recently been described as a suitable means of generating potent vaccines targeting flaviviruses. In this study, we directly compared attenuation, immunogenicity and efficacy of several prototype RepliVax constructs to available, well characterized live attenuated (LAV) and inactivated (INV) flavivirus vaccine controls in mice and hamsters. Other important aspects of general mechanisms and properties of RepliVax vaccines were also studied. The prototypes were found to be nonpathogenic in sensitive suckling mouse neurovirulence tests, and highly immunogenic and efficacious in mice and hamsters, with evidence that immunogenicity can be comparable to LAV controls in terms of both magnitude and durability of response. Our data also suggest that choice of inoculation route can be beneficial for maximizing RepliVax immunogenicity. Additionally, different vaccine constructs can be administered as cocktail formulations without compromising immunogenicity of individual components. RepliVax constructs were determined to induce a Th1 biased immune response, similar to LAVs, and different from INV inducing a Th2 type response. The results presented validate the utility of the RepliVax platform for development of novel flavivirus vaccines.
Vaccine | 2015
Sophia Mundle; Maryann Giel-Moloney; Harry Kleanthous; Konstantin V. Pugachev; Stephen F. Anderson
Purification of enveloped viruses such as live flavivirus vaccine candidates poses a challenge as one must retain viral infectivity to preserve immunogenicity. Here we describe a laboratory-scale purification procedure for two replication defective (single-cycle) flavivirus variants for use in a pre-clinical setting. The two step purification scheme based on hollow fiber tangential flow filtration (TFF) followed by anion exchange chromatography using convective interaction media (CIM(®)) monoliths results in a ∼60% recovery of infectious virus titer and can be used to prepare nearly homogenous, highly purified vaccine viruses with titers as high as 1×10(9) focus forming units per mL. Flavivirus virions prepared by this method are 2 and 3 orders of magnitude more pure with respect to dsDNA and BHK host cell proteins, respectively, as compared to the raw feed stream.
Vaccine | 2017
Maryann Giel-Moloney; Alexander A. Rumyantsev; Fred David; Monica Dias Figueiredo; Brad Feilmeier; Teshome Mebatsion; Mark Parrington; Harry Kleanthous; Konstantin V. Pugachev
The RepliVax® vaccine (RV) platform is based on flavivirus genomes that are rationally attenuated by deletion. These single-cycle RV vaccine candidates targeting flavivirus pathogens have been demonstrated to be safe, highly immunogenic, and efficacious in animal models, including non-human primates. Here we show utility of the technology for delivery of a non-flavivirus immunogen by engineering several West Nile-based RV vectors to express full-length rabies virus G protein. The rabies virus G protein gene was incorporated in place of different West Nile structural protein gene deletions. The resulting RV-RabG constructs were demonstrated to replicate to high titers (8 log10 infectious particles/ml) in complementing helper cells. Following infection of normal cells, they provided efficient rabies virus G protein expression, but did not spread to surrounding cells. Expression of rabies virus G protein was stable and maintained through multiple rounds of in vitro passaging. A sensitive neurovirulence test in 2-3 day old neonatal mice demonstrated that RV-RabG candidates were completely avirulent indicative of high safety. We evaluated the RV-RabG variants in several animal models (mice, dogs, and pigs) and demonstrated that a single dose elicited high titers of rabies virus-neutralizing antibodies and protected animals from live rabies virus challenge (mice and dogs). Importantly, dogs were protected at both one and two years post-immunization, demonstrating durable protective immunity. The data demonstrates the potential of the RepliVax® technology as a potent vector delivery platform for developing vaccine candidates against non-flavivirus targets.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Maryann Giel-Moloney; Ana P. Goncalvez; John Catalan; Valerie Lecouturier; Yves Girerd-Chambaz; Fernando Diaz; Francisco Maldonado-Arocho; Raul C. Gomila; Marie-Clotilde Bernard; Ray Oomen; Simon Delagrave; Nicolas Burdin; Harold Kleanthous; Nicolas Jackson; Jon H. Heinrichs; Konstantin V. Pugachev
Zika virus (ZIKV) is an emerging mosquito-borne pathogen representing a global health concern. It has been linked to fetal microcephaly and other birth defects and neurological disorders in adults. Sanofi Pasteur has engaged in the development of an inactivated ZIKV vaccine, as well as a live chimeric vaccine candidate ChimeriVax-Zika (CYZ) that could become a preferred vaccine depending on future ZIKV epidemiology. This report focuses on the CYZ candidate that was constructed by replacing the pre-membrane and envelope (prM-E) genes in the genome of live attenuated yellow fever 17D vaccine virus (YF 17D) with those from ZIKV yielding a viable CYZ chimeric virus. The replication rate of CYZ in the Vero cell substrate was increased by using a hybrid YF 17D-ZIKV signal sequence for the prM protein. CYZ was highly attenuated both in mice and in human in vitro models (human neuroblastoma and neuronal progenitor cells), without the need for additional attenuating modifications. It exhibited significantly reduced viral loads in organs compared to a wild-type ZIKV and a complete lack of neuroinvasion following inoculation of immunodeficient A129 mice. A single dose of CYZ elicited high titers of ZIKV-specific neutralizing antibodies in both immunocompetent and A129 mice and protected animals from ZIKV challenge. The data indicate that CYZ is a promising vaccine candidate against ZIKV.
Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics | 2017
Maryann Giel-Moloney; Michael Vaine; Linong Zhang; Mark Parrington; Beata Gajewska; Thorsten U. Vogel; Svetlana O. Pougatcheva; Xiaochu Duan; Timothy Farrell; Irina Ustyugova; Sanjay Phogat; Harry Kleanthous; Konstantin V. Pugachev
ABSTRACT The RepliVax vaccine platform(RV) is based on flavivirus genomes that are rationally attenuated by deletion. The self-limiting infection provided by RV has been demonstrated to be safe, highly immunogenic and efficacious for several vaccine candidates against flaviviruses. Here respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) F, influenza virus HA, and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) Env proteins were expressed in place of either prM-E or C-prM-E gene deletions of the West Nile (WN) virus genome. The resulting RV-RSV, -influenza and -SIV vaccine prototypes replicated efficiently in complementing helper cells expressing the WN structural proteins in trans. Expressed antigens exhibited correct post-translational processing and the RV recombinants were shown to be highly attenuated and immunogenic in mice, eliciting strong antigen-specific antibodies as well as detectable T-cell responses. These data support the utility of RV vectors for development of vaccines against non-flavivirus targets including rabies and HIV.