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Lassa virus is estimated to cause thousands of human deaths per year, primarily due to spillovers from its natural host, Mastomys rodents. Efforts to create vaccines and antibody therapeutics must account for the evolutionary variability of the Lassa virus's glycoprotein complex (GPC), which mediates viral entry into cells and is the target of neutralizing antibodies. To map the evolutionary space accessible to GPC, we used pseudovirus deep mutational scanning to measure how nearly all GPC amino-acid mutations affected cell entry and antibody neutralization. Our experiments defined functional constraints throughout GPC. We quantified how GPC mutations affected neutralization with a panel of monoclonal antibodies. All antibodies tested were escaped by mutations that existed among natural Lassa virus lineages. Overall, our work describes a biosafety-level-2 method to elucidate the mutational space accessible to GPC and shows how prospective characterization of antigenic variation could aid the design of therapeutics and vaccines.
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Caleb R. Carr
Katharine H. D. Crawford
University of Washington
Michael Murphy
University of Washington
Immunity
University of Washington
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Scripps Research Institute
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Carr et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6035db6db643587596c79 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.immuni.2024.06.013