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Dive into the research topics where Vicente Mas is active.

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Featured researches published by Vicente Mas.


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

Neutralizing antibodies against the preactive form of respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein offer unique possibilities for clinical intervention

Margarita Magro; Vicente Mas; Keith J. Chappell; Mónica Vázquez; Olga Cano; Daniel Luque; María C. Terrón; José A. Melero; Concepción Palomo

Human respiratory syncytial virus (hRSV) is the most important viral agent of pediatric respiratory infections worldwide. The only specific treatment available today is a humanized monoclonal antibody (Palivizumab) directed against the F glycoprotein, administered prophylactically to children at very high risk of severe hRSV infections. Palivizumab, as most anti-F antibodies so far described, recognizes an epitope that is shared by the two conformations in which hRSV_F can fold, the metastable prefusion form and the highly stable postfusion conformation. We now describe a unique class of antibodies specific for the prefusion form of this protein that account for most of the neutralizing activity of either a rabbit serum raised against a vaccinia virus recombinant expressing hRSV_F or a human Ig preparation (Respigam), which was used for prophylaxis before Palivizumab. These antibodies therefore offer unique possibilities for immune intervention against hRSV, and their production should be assessed in trials of hRSV vaccines.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Low-pH-Induced Membrane Fusion Mediated by Human Metapneumovirus F Protein Is a Rare, Strain-Dependent Phenomenon

Sander Herfst; Vicente Mas; Lorena S. Ver; Rutger J. Wierda; Albert D. M. E. Osterhaus; Ron A. M. Fouchier; José A. Melero

ABSTRACT Membrane fusion promoted by human metapneumovirus (HMPV) fusion (F) protein was suggested to require low pH (R. M. Schowalter, S. E. Smith, and R. E. Dutch, J. Virol. 80:10931-10941, 2006). Using prototype F proteins representing the four HMPV genetic lineages, we detected low-pH-dependent fusion only with some lineage A proteins and not with lineage B proteins. A glycine at position 294 was found responsible for the low-pH requirement in lineage A proteins. Only 6% of all HMPV lineage A F sequences have 294G, and none of the lineage B sequences have 294G. Thus, acidic pH is not a general trigger of HMPV F proteins for activity.


PLOS Pathogens | 2015

Characterization of a Prefusion-Specific Antibody That Recognizes a Quaternary, Cleavage-Dependent Epitope on the RSV Fusion Glycoprotein

Morgan S. A. Gilman; Syed M. Moin; Vicente Mas; Man Chen; Nita K. Patel; Kari Kramer; Qing Zhu; Stephanie C. Kabeche; Azad Kumar; Concepción Palomo; Tim Beaumont; Ulrich Baxa; Nancy Ulbrandt; José A. Melero; Barney S. Graham; Jason S. McLellan

Prevention efforts for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) have been advanced due to the recent isolation and characterization of antibodies that specifically recognize the prefusion conformation of the RSV fusion (F) glycoprotein. These potently neutralizing antibodies are in clinical development for passive prophylaxis and have also aided the design of vaccine antigens that display prefusion-specific epitopes. To date, prefusion-specific antibodies have been shown to target two antigenic sites on RSV F, but both of these sites are also present on monomeric forms of F. Here we present a structural and functional characterization of human antibody AM14, which potently neutralized laboratory strains and clinical isolates of RSV from both A and B subtypes. The crystal structure and location of escape mutations revealed that AM14 recognizes a quaternary epitope that spans two protomers and includes a region that undergoes extensive conformational changes in the pre- to postfusion F transition. Binding assays demonstrated that AM14 is unique in its specific recognition of trimeric furin-cleaved prefusion F, which is the mature form of F on infectious virions. These results demonstrate that the prefusion F trimer contains potent neutralizing epitopes not present on monomers and that AM14 should be particularly useful for characterizing the conformational state of RSV F-based vaccine antigens.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016

Generation and Characterization of ALX-0171, a Potent Novel Therapeutic Nanobody for the Treatment of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infection

Laurent Detalle; Thomas Stohr; Concepción Palomo; Pedro A. Piedra; Brian E. Gilbert; Vicente Mas; Andrena Millar; Ultan F. Power; Catelijne Stortelers; Koen Allosery; José A. Melero; Erik Depla

ABSTRACT Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is an important causative agent of lower respiratory tract infections in infants and elderly individuals. Its fusion (F) protein is critical for virus infection. It is targeted by several investigational antivirals and by palivizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody used prophylactically in infants considered at high risk of severe RSV disease. ALX-0171 is a trimeric Nanobody that binds the antigenic site II of RSV F protein with subnanomolar affinity. ALX-0171 demonstrated in vitro neutralization superior to that of palivizumab against prototypic RSV subtype A and B strains. Moreover, ALX-0171 completely blocked replication to below the limit of detection for 87% of the viruses tested, whereas palivizumab did so for 18% of the viruses tested at a fixed concentration. Importantly, ALX-0171 was highly effective in reducing both nasal and lung RSV titers when delivered prophylactically or therapeutically directly to the lungs of cotton rats. ALX-0171 represents a potent novel antiviral compound with significant potential to treat RSV-mediated disease.


Science immunology | 2016

Rapid profiling of RSV antibody repertoires from the memory B cells of naturally infected adult donors

Morgan S. A. Gilman; Carlos A. Castellanos; Man Chen; Joan O. Ngwuta; Eileen Goodwin; Syed M. Moin; Vicente Mas; José A. Melero; Peter F. Wright; Barney S. Graham; Jason S. McLellan; Laura M. Walker

Anti–RSV F antibody repertoire profiling reveals new opportunities for vaccine design and passive therapy. RSV antibodies in profile Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) causes cold-like symptoms in healthy adults but can have serious complications in both the very young and elderly. No vaccine is approved for RSV, and although a prophylactic antibody, palivizumab, is available for high-risk infants, therapy is generally supportive. Now, Gilman et al. profile the human antibody response to the RSV fusion (F) glycoprotein. They find that the response is broad but that more potent antibodies tend to target the apex of the prefusion conformation of RSV F, suggesting this site as a putative vaccine target. Moreover, many of these antibodies were more potent than palivizumab and some cross-neutralized human metapneumovirus, making them candidates for new passive prophylactics. Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) causes substantial morbidity and mortality in young children and the elderly. There are currently no licensed RSV vaccines, and passive prophylaxis with the monoclonal antibody palivizumab is restricted to high-risk infants in part due to its modest efficacy. Although it is widely agreed that an effective RSV vaccine will require the induction of a potent neutralizing antibody response against the RSV fusion (F) glycoprotein, little is known about the specificities and functional activities of RSV F–specific antibodies induced by natural infection. We have comprehensively profiled the human antibody response to RSV F by isolating and characterizing 364 RSV F–specific monoclonal antibodies from the memory B cells of three healthy adult donors. In all donors, the antibody response to RSV F was composed of a broad diversity of clones that targeted several antigenic sites. Nearly half of the most potent antibodies targeted a previously undefined site of vulnerability near the apex of the prefusion conformation of RSV F (preF). Additionally, the antibodies targeting this new site displayed convergent sequence features, thus providing a future means to rapidly detect the presence of these antibodies in human vaccine samples. Many of the antibodies that bind preF-specific surfaces were >100 times more potent than palivizumab and several cross-neutralized human metapneumovirus. Together, the results have implications for the design and evaluation of RSV vaccine candidates and offer new options for passive prophylaxis.


Journal of Virology | 2014

A Monomeric Uncleaved Respiratory Syncytial Virus F Antigen Retains Prefusion-Specific Neutralizing Epitopes

Kurt Swanson; Kara Balabanis; Yuhong Xie; Yukti Aggarwal; Concepción Palomo; Vicente Mas; Claire M. Metrick; Hui Yang; Christine A. Shaw; José A. Melero; Philip R. Dormitzer; Andrea Carfi

ABSTRACT Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading infectious cause of severe respiratory disease in infants and a major cause of respiratory illness in the elderly. There remains an unmet vaccine need despite decades of research. Insufficient potency, homogeneity, and stability of previous RSV fusion protein (F) subunit vaccine candidates have hampered vaccine development. RSV F and related parainfluenza virus (PIV) F proteins are cleaved by furin during intracellular maturation, producing disulfide-linked F1 and F2 fragments. During cell entry, the cleaved Fs rearrange from prefusion trimers to postfusion trimers. Using RSV F constructs with mutated furin cleavage sites, we isolated an uncleaved RSV F ectodomain that is predominantly monomeric and requires specific cleavage between F1 and F2 for self-association and rearrangement into stable postfusion trimers. The uncleaved RSV F monomer is folded and homogenous and displays at least two key RSV-neutralizing epitopes shared between the prefusion and postfusion conformations. Unlike the cleaved trimer, the uncleaved monomer binds the prefusion-specific monoclonal antibody D25 and human neutralizing immunoglobulins that do not bind to postfusion F. These observations suggest that the uncleaved RSV F monomer has a prefusion-like conformation and is a potential prefusion subunit vaccine candidate. IMPORTANCE RSV is the leading infectious cause of severe respiratory disease in infants and a major cause of respiratory illness in the elderly. Development of an RSV vaccine was stymied when a clinical trial using a formalin-inactivated RSV virus made disease, following RSV infection, more severe. Recent studies have defined the structures that the RSV F envelope glycoprotein adopts before and after virus entry (prefusion and postfusion conformations, respectively). Key neutralization epitopes of prefusion and postfusion RSV F have been identified, and a number of current vaccine development efforts are focused on generating easily produced subunit antigens that retain these epitopes. Here we show that a simple modification in the F ectodomain results in a homogeneous protein that retains critical prefusion neutralizing epitopes. These results improve our understanding of RSV F protein folding and structure and can guide further vaccine design efforts.


Journal of Virology | 2011

Residues of the human metapneumovirus fusion (F) protein critical for its strain-related fusion phenotype: implications for the virus replication cycle.

Vicente Mas; Sander Herfst; Albert D. M. E. Osterhaus; Ron A. M. Fouchier; José A. Melero

ABSTRACT The paramyxovirus F protein promotes fusion of the viral and cell membranes for virus entry, as well as cell-cell fusion for syncytium formation. Most paramyxovirus F proteins are triggered at neutral pH to initiate membrane fusion. Previous studies, however, demonstrated that human metapneumovirus (hMPV) F proteins are triggered at neutral or acidic pH in transfected cells, depending on the strain origin of the F sequences (S. Herfst et al., J. Virol. 82:8891–8895, 2008). We now report an extensive mutational analysis which identifies four variable residues (294, 296, 396, and 404) as the main determinants of the different syncytial phenotypes found among hMPV F proteins. These residues lie near two conserved histidines (H368 and H435) in a three-dimensional (3D) model of the pretriggered hMPV F trimer. Mutagenesis of H368 and H435 indicates that protonation of these histidines (particularly His435) is a key event to destabilize the hMPV F proteins that require low pH for cell-cell fusion. The syncytial phenotypes were reproduced in cells infected with the corresponding hMPV strains. However, the low-pH dependency for syncytium formation could not be related with a virus entry pathway dependent on an acidic environment. It is postulated that low pH may be acting for some hMPV strains as certain destabilizing mutations found in unusual strains of other paramyxoviruses. In any case, the results presented here and those reported by Schowalter et al. (J. Virol. 83:1511–1522, 2009) highlight the relevance of certain residues in the linker region and domain II of the pretriggered hMPV F protein for the process of membrane fusion.


Journal of Virology | 2016

Influence of Respiratory Syncytial Virus F Glycoprotein Conformation on Induction of Protective Immune Responses

Concepción Palomo; Vicente Mas; Michelle Thom; Mónica Vázquez; Olga Cano; María C. Terrón; Daniel Luque; Geraldine Taylor; José A. Melero

ABSTRACT Human respiratory syncytial virus (hRSV) vaccine development has received new impetus from structure-based studies of its main protective antigen, the fusion (F) glycoprotein. Three soluble forms of F have been described: monomeric, trimeric prefusion, and trimeric postfusion. Most human neutralizing antibodies recognize epitopes found exclusively in prefusion F. Although prefusion F induces higher levels of neutralizing antibodies than does postfusion F, postfusion F can also induce protection against virus challenge in animals. However, the immunogenicity and protective efficacy of the three forms of F have not hitherto been directly compared. Hence, BALB/c mice were immunized with a single dose of the three proteins adjuvanted with CpG and challenged 4 weeks later with virus. Serum antibodies, lung virus titers, weight loss, and pulmonary pathology were evaluated after challenge. Whereas small amounts of postfusion F were sufficient to protect mice, larger amounts of monomeric and prefusion F proteins were required for protection. However, postfusion and monomeric F proteins were associated with more pathology after challenge than was prefusion F. Antibodies induced by all doses of prefusion F, in contrast to other F protein forms, reacted predominantly with the prefusion F conformation. At high doses, prefusion F also induced the highest titers of neutralizing antibodies, and all mice were protected, yet at low doses of the immunogen, these antibodies neutralized virus poorly, and mice were not protected. These findings should be considered when developing new hRSV vaccine candidates. IMPORTANCE Protection against hRSV infection is afforded mainly by neutralizing antibodies, which recognize mostly epitopes found exclusively in the viral fusion (F) glycoprotein trimer, folded in its prefusion conformation, i.e., before activation for membrane fusion. Although prefusion F is able to induce high levels of neutralizing antibodies, highly stable postfusion F (found after membrane fusion) is also able to induce neutralizing antibodies and protect against infection. In addition, a monomeric form of hRSV F that shares epitopes with prefusion F was recently reported. Since each of the indicated forms of hRSV F may have advantages and disadvantages for the development of safe and efficacious subunit vaccines, a direct comparison of the immunogenic properties and protective efficacies of the different forms of hRSV F was made in a mouse model. The results obtained show important differences between the noted immunogens that should be borne in mind when considering the development of hRSV vaccines.


Vaccine | 2017

Structural, antigenic and immunogenic features of respiratory syncytial virus glycoproteins relevant for vaccine development.

José A. Melero; Vicente Mas; Jason S. McLellan

Extraordinary progress in the structure and immunobiology of the human respiratory syncytial virus glycoproteins has been accomplished during the last few years. Determination of the fusion (F) glycoprotein structure folded in either the prefusion or the postfusion conformation was an inspiring breakthrough not only to understand the structural changes associated with the membrane fusion process but additionally to appreciate the antigenic intricacies of the F protein. Furthermore, these developments have opened new avenues for structure-based designs of promising hRSV vaccine candidates. Finally, recent advances in our knowledge of the attachment (G) glycoprotein and its interaction with cell-surface receptors have revitalized interest in this molecule as a vaccine, as well as its role in hRSV immunobiology.


Nature Communications | 2017

Potent single-domain antibodies that arrest respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein in its prefusion state.

Iebe Rossey; Morgan S. A. Gilman; Stephanie C. Kabeche; Koen Sedeyn; Daniel Wrapp; Masaru Kanekiyo; Man Chen; Vicente Mas; Jan Spitaels; José A. Melero; Barney S. Graham; Bert Schepens; Jason S. McLellan; Xavier Saelens

Human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the main cause of lower respiratory tract infections in young children. The RSV fusion protein (F) is highly conserved and is the only viral membrane protein that is essential for infection. The prefusion conformation of RSV F is considered the most relevant target for antiviral strategies because it is the fusion-competent form of the protein and the primary target of neutralizing activity present in human serum. Here, we describe two llama-derived single-domain antibodies (VHHs) that have potent RSV-neutralizing activity and bind selectively to prefusion RSV F with picomolar affinity. Crystal structures of these VHHs in complex with prefusion F show that they recognize a conserved cavity formed by two F protomers. In addition, the VHHs prevent RSV replication and lung infiltration of inflammatory monocytes and T cells in RSV-challenged mice. These prefusion F-specific VHHs represent promising antiviral agents against RSV.

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José A. Melero

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Concepción Palomo

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Olga Cano

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Mónica Vázquez

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Daniel Luque

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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María C. Terrón

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Eduardo Olmedillas

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Laura Rodríguez

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Barney S. Graham

National Institutes of Health

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