Lineage-matched Oropouche virus mRNA-LNP vaccines confer complete, cross-protective immunity in mice
Yumiko Yamada, Inho Cha, Soowon Kang, Wan-Shan Yang, Morgan Lewis, Chloe Chung, Woo-Jin Shin, Jun Bae Park, Nam-Hyuk Cho, Young-Ki Choi, Natasha L. Tilston, Jae U. Jung

TL;DR
Researchers developed mRNA vaccines for Oropouche virus that offer complete protection in mice and can be adapted to new strains.
Contribution
The study introduces lineage-matched mRNA-LNP vaccines that provide cross-protective immunity against OROV strains.
Findings
mRNA-LNP vaccines induced strong humoral and cellular immune responses in mice.
The outbreak-lineage vaccine provided full protection against both prototype and outbreak OROV strains.
Incorporating contemporary antigens enhances cross-strain protection and vaccine potency.
Abstract
Oropouche virus (OROV) is an emerging orthobunyavirus responsible for recurrent and increasingly widespread outbreaks across South and Central America, including a recent epidemic that elevated global concern. In addition to its known neurotropic potential—manifesting as meningitis and encephalitis—OROV is now associated with vertical transmission and adverse pregnancy outcomes, underscoring its growing clinical and public health relevance. The rapid geographic expansion and extensive genetic diversification of circulating OROV lineages highlight the need for vaccine platforms that can be rapidly updated to match evolving strains. To address this challenge, we developed mRNA-lipid nanoparticle (mRNA-LNP) vaccines encoding OROV envelope glycoproteins from a historical prototype lineage (OROV BeAn19991; Brazil) and a recently circulating outbreak lineage (OROV AM0059; Brazil). Both…
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral Infections and Vectors · Vector-Borne Animal Diseases · Mosquito-borne diseases and control
