A surrogate marker of protection confirms the efficacy of an AddaS03-adjuvanted West Nile virus subunit vaccine

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Abstract

West Nile virus (WNV) is the causative agent of fatal West Nile encephalitis. To date, no human vaccine against WNV has been approved. Adjuvants are important for developing effective and affordable vaccines that enhance the immunogenicity and decrease the required antigen doses. In this study, we assessed the efficacy of AddaS03, a synthetic adjuvant analogous to AS03, in a WNV subunit vaccine composed of soluble recombinant envelope protein (sEnv). Using a passive immunization mouse model, we defined the neutralizing antibody titer threshold required for protection against lethal WNV infections and applied this threshold as a surrogate marker to evaluate adjuvant efficacy. AddaS03-adjuvanted formulations elicited markedly higher neutralizing antibody titers compared to Alhydrogel adjuvant 2% (Alhydrogel), even at suboptimal antigen doses, and consistently exceeded the defined protective threshold titer. Moreover, in a sequential challenge mouse model, AddaS03-adjuvanted vaccines completely protected mice from symptomatic WNV infections, whereas Alhydrogel-adjuvanted vaccines failed to confer full protection. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that AddaS03 is a promising adjuvant for WNV subunit vaccine development and highlights the utility of a passive immunization model for defining protective antibody thresholds as a surrogate marker for vaccine evaluation.

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