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Featured researches published by Melanie Horton.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Vaccine-Induced Cellular Immune Responses Reduce Plasma Viral Concentrations after Repeated Low-Dose Challenge with Pathogenic Simian Immunodeficiency Virus SIVmac239

Nancy A. Wilson; Jason S. Reed; Gnankang Napoé; Shari M. Piaskowski; Andy Szymanski; Jessica Furlott; Edna J. Gonzalez; Levi Yant; Nicholas J. Maness; Gemma E. May; Taeko Soma; Matthew R. Reynolds; Eva G. Rakasz; Richard Rudersdorf; Adrian B. McDermott; David H. O'Connor; Thomas C. Friedrich; David B. Allison; Amit Patki; Louis J. Picker; Dennis R. Burton; Jing Lin; Lingyi Huang; Deepa Patel; Gwendolyn Heindecker; Jiang Fan; Michael Citron; Melanie Horton; Fubao Wang; Xiaoping Liang

ABSTRACT The goal of an AIDS vaccine regimen designed to induce cellular immune responses should be to reduce the viral set point and preserve memory CD4 lymphocytes. Here we investigated whether vaccine-induced cellular immunity in the absence of any Env-specific antibodies can control viral replication following multiple low-dose challenges with the highly pathogenic SIVmac239 isolate. Eight Mamu-A*01-positive Indian rhesus macaques were vaccinated with simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) gag, tat, rev, and nef using a DNA prime-adenovirus boost strategy. Peak viremia (P = 0.007) and the chronic phase set point (P = 0.0192) were significantly decreased in the vaccinated cohort, out to 1 year postinfection. Loss of CD4+ memory populations was also ameliorated in vaccinated animals. Interestingly, only one of the eight vaccinees developed Env-specific neutralizing antibodies after infection. The control observed was significantly improved over that observed in animals vaccinated with SIV gag only. Vaccine-induced cellular immune responses can, therefore, exert a measure of control over replication of the AIDS virus in the complete absence of neutralizing antibody and give us hope that a vaccine designed to induce cellular immune responses might control viral replication.


Journal of Virology | 2002

Mamu-A*01 allele-mediated attenuation of disease progression in simian-human immunodeficiency virus infection.

Zhi Qiang Zhang; Tong-Ming Fu; Danilo R. Casimiro; Mary-Ellen Davies; Xiaoping Liang; William A. Schleif; Larry Handt; Lynda Tussey; Minchun Chen; Aimin Tang; Keith A. Wilson; Wendy L. Trigona; Daniel C. Freed; Charles Tan; Melanie Horton; Emilio A. Emini; John W. Shiver

ABSTRACT Expression of several major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I alleles is associated with a protective effect against disease progression in both human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and simian immunodeficiency virus infection. To understand the mechanism underlying this effect, we investigated the expression of the MHC class I allele Mamu-A*01 in simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) infection, one of the major models for evaluation of AIDS vaccine candidates. We found that disease progression was significantly delayed in Mamu-A∗01-positive rhesus monkeys infected with the highly pathogenic SHIV 89.6P. The delay corresponded not only to a noted Mamu-A∗01-restricted dominant cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) response but also to a lower viral load in lymph nodes (LN) and, importantly, to minimal destruction of LN structure during early infection. In contrast, Mamu-A∗01-negative monkeys exhibited massive destruction of LN structure with accompanying rapid disease progression. These data indicate that MHC class I allele-restricted CTL responses may play an important role in preservation of lymphoid tissue structure, thereby resulting in attenuation of disease progression in immunodeficiency virus infection.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Universal Influenza B Vaccine Based on the Maturational Cleavage Site of the Hemagglutinin Precursor

Elisabetta Bianchi; Xiaoping Liang; Paolo Ingallinella; Marco Finotto; Michael Chastain; Jiang Fan; Tong-Ming Fu; Hong Chang Song; Melanie Horton; Daniel C. Freed; Walter Manger; Emily Wen; Li Shi; Roxana Ionescu; Colleen Price; Marc Wenger; Emilio A. Emini; Riccardo Cortese; Gennaro Ciliberto; John W. Shiver; Antonello Pessi

ABSTRACT Conventional influenza vaccines can prevent infection, but their efficacy depends on the degree of antigenic “match” between the strains used for vaccine preparation and those circulating in the population. A universal influenza vaccine based on invariant regions of the virus, able to provide broadly cross-reactive protection, without requiring continuous manufacturing update, would solve a major medical need. Since the temporal and geographical dominance of the influenza virus type and/or subtype (A/H3, A/H1, or B) cannot yet be predicted, a universal vaccine, like the vaccines currently in use, should include both type A and type B influenza virus components. However, while encouraging preclinical data are available for influenza A virus, no candidate universal vaccine is available for influenza B virus. We show here that a peptide conjugate vaccine, based on the highly conserved maturational cleavage site of the HA0 precursor of the influenza B virus hemagglutinin, can elicit a protective immune response against lethal challenge with viruses belonging to either one of the representative, non-antigenically cross-reactive influenza B virus lineages. We demonstrate that protection by the HA0 vaccine is mediated by antibodies, probably through effector mechanisms, and that a major part of the protective response targets the most conserved region of HA0, the P1 residue of the scissile bond and the fusion peptide domain. In addition, we present preliminary evidence that the approach can be extended to influenza A virus, although the equivalent HA0 conjugate is not as efficacious as for influenza B virus.


mAbs | 2016

Rapid isolation of dengue-neutralizing antibodies from single cell-sorted human antigen-specific memory B-cell cultures

Kara S. Cox; Aimin Tang; Zhifeng Chen; Melanie Horton; Hao Yan; Xin-Min Wang; Sheri A. Dubey; Daniel DiStefano; Andrew Ettenger; Rachel H. Fong; Benjamin J. Doranz; Danilo R. Casimiro; Kalpit A. Vora

Monitoring antigen-specific memory B cells and the antibodies they encode is important for understanding the specificity, breadth and duration of immune response to an infection or vaccination. The antibodies isolated could further help design vaccine antigens for raising relevant protective immune responses. However, developing assays to measure and isolate antigen-specific memory B cells is technically challenging due to the low frequencies of these cells that exist in the circulating blood. Here, we describe a flow cytometry method to identify and isolate dengue envelope-specific memory B cells using a labeled dengue envelope protein. We enumerated dengue-envelope specific memory B cells from a cohort of dengue seropositive donors using this direct flow cytometry assay. A more established and conventional assay, the cultured B ELISPOT, was used as a benchmark comparator. Furthermore, we were able to confirm the single-sorted memory B-cell specificity by culturing B cells and differentiating them into plasma cells using cell lines expressing CD40L. The culture supernatants were assayed for antigen binding and the ability of the antibodies to neutralize the cognate dengue virus. Moreover, we successfully isolated the heavy and light Ig sequences and expressed them as full-length recombinant antibodies to reproduce the activity seen in culture supernatants. Mapping of these antibodies revealed a novel epitope for dengue 2 virus serotype. In conclusion, we established a reproducible methodology to enumerate antigen-specific memory B cells and assay their encoded antibodies for functional characterization.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Development of a Novel Vaccine Containing Binary Toxin for the Prevention of Clostridium difficile Disease with Enhanced Efficacy against NAP1 Strains

Susan Secore; Su Wang; Julie Doughtry; Jinfu Xie; Matt Miezeiewski; Richard R. Rustandi; Melanie Horton; Rachel Xoconostle; Bei Wang; Catherine Lancaster; Adam Kristopeit; Sheng-Ching Wang; Sianny Christanti; Salvatore Vitelli; Marie‐Pierre Gentile; Aaron Rudy Goerke; Julie M. Skinner; Erica Strable; David S. Thiriot; Jean-Luc Bodmer; Jon H. Heinrichs

Clostridium difficile infections (CDI) are a leading cause of nosocomial diarrhea in the developed world. The main virulence factors of the bacterium are the large clostridial toxins (LCTs), TcdA and TcdB, which are largely responsible for the symptoms of the disease. Recent outbreaks of CDI have been associated with the emergence of hypervirulent strains, such as NAP1/BI/027, many strains of which also produce a third toxin, binary toxin (CDTa and CDTb). These hypervirulent strains have been associated with increased morbidity and higher mortality. Here we present pre-clinical data describing a novel tetravalent vaccine composed of attenuated forms of TcdA, TcdB and binary toxin components CDTa and CDTb. We demonstrate, using the Syrian golden hamster model of CDI, that the inclusion of binary toxin components CDTa and CDTb significantly improves the efficacy of the vaccine against challenge with NAP1 strains in comparison to vaccines containing only TcdA and TcdB antigens, while providing comparable efficacy against challenge with the prototypic, non-epidemic strain VPI10463. This combination vaccine elicits high neutralizing antibody titers against TcdA, TcdB and binary toxin in both hamsters and rhesus macaques. Finally we present data that binary toxin alone can act as a virulence factor in animal models. Taken together, these data strongly support the inclusion of binary toxin in a vaccine against CDI to provide enhanced protection from epidemic strains of C. difficile.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2013

Development and Optimization of a Novel Assay To Measure Neutralizing Antibodies against Clostridium difficile Toxins

Jinfu Xie; Julie Zorman; Lani Indrawati; Melanie Horton; Keri Soring; Joseph M. Antonello; Yuhua Zhang; Susan Secore; Matthew Miezeiewski; Su Wang; Anthony Kanavage; Julie M. Skinner; Irene Rogers; Jean-Luc Bodmer; Jon H. Heinrichs

ABSTRACT Clostridium difficile produces two major virulence toxins, toxin A (TcdA) and toxin B (TcdB). Antitoxin antibodies, especially neutralizing antibodies, have been shown to be associated with a lower incidence of C. difficile infection (CDI) recurrence, and antibody levels are predictive of asymptomatic colonization. The development of an assay to detect the presence of neutralizing antibodies in animal and human sera for the evaluation of vaccine efficacy is highly desired. We have developed such an assay, which allows for the quantification of the effect of toxins on eukaryotic cells in an automated manner. We describe here the optimization of this assay to measure toxin potency as well as neutralizing antibody (NAb) activity against C. difficile toxins using a design-of-experiment (DOE) methodology. Toxin concentration and source, cell seeding density, and serum-toxin preincubation time were optimized in the assay using Vero cells. The assay was shown to be robust and to produce linear results across a range of antibody concentrations. It can be used to quantify neutralizing antibodies in sera of monkeys and hamsters immunized with C. difficile toxoid vaccines. This assay was shown to correlate strongly with traditional assays which rely on labor-intensive methods of determining neutralizing antibody titers by visual microscopic inspection of intoxicated-cell monolayers. This assay has utility for the selection and optimization of C. difficile vaccine candidates.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Stability Characterization of a Vaccine Antigen Based on the Respiratory Syncytial Virus Fusion Glycoprotein

Jessica A. Flynn; Eberhard Durr; Ryan Swoyer; Pedro J. Cejas; Melanie Horton; Jennifer D. Galli; Scott Cosmi; Amy S. Espeseth; Andrew J. Bett; Lan Zhang

Infection with Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) causes both upper and lower respiratory tract disease in humans, leading to significant morbidity and mortality in both young children and older adults. Currently, there is no licensed vaccine available, and therapeutic options are limited. During the infection process, the type I viral fusion (F) glycoprotein on the surface of the RSV particle rearranges from a metastable prefusion conformation to a highly stable postfusion form. In people naturally infected with RSV, most potent neutralizing antibodies are directed to the prefusion form of the F protein. Therefore, an engineered RSV F protein stabilized in the prefusion conformation (DS-Cav1) is an attractive vaccine candidate. Long-term stability at 4°C or higher is a desirable attribute for a commercial subunit vaccine antigen. To assess the stability of DS-Cav1, we developed assays using D25, an antibody which recognizes the prefusion F-specific antigenic site Ø, and a novel antibody 4D7, which was found to bind antigenic site I on the postfusion form of RSV F. Biophysical analysis indicated that, upon long-term storage at 4°C, DS-Cav1 undergoes a conformational change, adopting alternate structures that concomitantly lose the site Ø epitope and gain the ability to bind 4D7.


Archive | 2006

A Universal Influenza B Peptide Vaccine

Paolo Ingallinella; Elisabetta Bianchi; Xiaoping Liang; Marco Finotto; Michael Chastain; Jiang Fan; Tong-Ming Fu; Hong Chang Song; Melanie Horton; Daniel C. Freed; Walter Manger; Emily Wen; Li Shi; Roxana Ionescu; Colleen Price; Marc Wenger; Emilio A. Emini; Riccardo Cortese; Gennaro Ciliberto; John W. Shiver; Antonello Pessi

Paolo Ingallinella, Elisabetta Bianchi, Xiaoping Liang, Marco Finotto, Michael Chastain, Jiang Fan, Tong-Ming Fu, Hong Chang Song, Melanie Horton, Daniel Freed, Walter Manger, Emily Wen, Li Shi, Roxana Ionescu, Colleen Price, Marc Wenger, Emilio Emini, Riccardo Cortese, Gennaro Ciliberto, John Shiver and Antonello Pessi IRBM P.Angeletti, Pomezia (Rome), Italy; Merck Research Laboratories, West Point, PA, USA


Archive | 2013

Vaccines against clostridium difficile comprising recombinant toxins

Jon H. Heinrichs; Jean-Luc Bodmer; Susan Secore; Aaron Rudy Goerke; Ivette Caro-Aguilar; Melanie Horton; Matthew Miezeiewski; Julie M. Skinner; Su Wang; Jinfu Xie; Rachel Xoconostle; Julie K. Zorman


Journal of Immunology | 2015

Isolation of Dengue neutralizing antibodies from single cell sorted human antigen specific memory B cell cultures (VAC11P.1107)

Kara S. Cox; Aimin Tang; Zhifeng Chen; Melanie Horton; Steven Meschino; Hao Yan; Xin-Min Wang; Sheri A. Dubey; Daniel DiStefano; Kalpit A. Vora

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