Felix Pahmeier,Stephanie R. Monticelli,Xinyi Feng,Christy K. Hjorth,Albert Wang,Ana I. Kuehne,Russell R. Bakken,Thomas Batchelor,S. Lee,Marissa Middlecamp,Lauren Stuart,Amaro Nunes Duarte‐Neto,Dafna M. Abelson,Jason S. McLellan,Scott B. Biering,Andrew S. Herbert,Kartik Chandran,Eva Harris
出处
期刊:Science Translational Medicine [American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)] 日期:2025-02-19卷期号:17 (786)
Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) is a priority pathogen transmitted by tick bites, with no vaccines or specific therapeutics approved to date. Severe disease manifestations include hemorrhage, endothelial dysfunction, and multiorgan failure. Infected cells release the viral glycoprotein GP38, whose extracellular function is presently unknown. GP38 is considered an important target for vaccine and therapeutic design because GP38-specific antibodies can protect against severe disease in animal models, albeit through an unknown mechanism of action. Here, we showed that GP38 induces endothelial barrier dysfunction in vitro by disrupting the endothelial glycocalyx layer and triggering hyperpermeability. We also demonstrated that GP38 alone can cause vascular leak in a mouse model. We found that CCHFV infection leads to vascular leak in vivo, which was exacerbated by exogenous administration of GP38, facilitating dissemination of CCHFV into target tissues such as the liver. Protective antibodies that recognized specific antigenic sites on GP38, but not a protective neutralizing antibody binding the structural protein Gc, potently inhibited endothelial hyperpermeability in vitro and vascular leak in vivo during CCHFV infection. This work uncovers a function of the circulating viral protein GP38 as a viral toxin in CCHFV pathogenesis and elucidates a potential mode of action of nonneutralizing yet protective GP38-specific antibodies.