Stabilized Full-Length Measles Fusion Protein Elicits Potent Immunity and Protection In Vivo

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Abstract

Measles virus (MeV) is a highly contagious pathogen that causes significant morbidity and mortality in populations with low vaccination coverage. Infection typically leads to immune amnesia and, in rare cases, fatal neurological disease. While current live-attenuated vaccines are highly effective, they primarily elicit neutralizing antibodies against the hemagglutinin (H) glycoprotein, with a less robust response to the fusion (F) protein, a key protein for viral entry. To improve the immunogenicity of the F protein, we designed and characterized stabilized, prefusion MeV F protein antigens. We engineered both soluble ectodomains (FECTO) and full-length, membrane-embedded proteins (FFL) with mutations that confer thermal stability. Cryo-electron microscopy confirmed that these engineered antigens faithfully maintain the native prefusion conformation. When evaluated in a cotton rat model, immunization with either FECTO or FFL constructs induced neutralizing antibodies and elicited protection against viral challenge. The most stable full-length construct (FFL 3M) elicited a more potent neutralizing antibody response than its ectodomain counterpart. Importantly, no evidence of vaccine-enhanced respiratory disease was observed. These findings establish that a thermostable, full-length F protein is a superior immunogen to its soluble ectodomain. This work presents a promising candidate for next-generation, non-replicating measles vaccines intended to complement current vaccination strategies and provide a safe option for immunocompromised individuals and others who cannot receive live-virus vaccines.

One-Sentence Summary

A prefusion-stabilized, full-length measles Fusion glycoprotein immunogen induces strong neutralizing responses and offers protection against challenge with wild-type virus.

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