Antibodies from primary dengue (DENV1-4) or Zika (ZIKV) virus infections can influence subsequent heterotypic infections, but their protective characteristics are not well defined. We analyzed pre-infection plasma samples from children in our Nicaraguan cohort study who later developed either dengue fever (DF; n = 31) or dengue hemorrhagic fever/dengue shock syndrome (DHF/DSS; n = 33) upon secondary heterotypic DENV infection. Various antibody properties, notably antibody-dependent complement deposition, correlated with protection against DHF/DSS. Interestingly, this association was strongest when using recombinant ZIKV antigens despite participants being ZIKV naive. Additionally, complement-mediated virion lysis (virolysis) with ZIKV virions was strongly associated with protection, a finding replicated in an independent sample set. ZIKV virolysis emerged as the only antibody property linked to reduced risk of DHF/DSS and severe symptoms such as thrombocytopenia and plasma leakage. These results suggest that ZIKV-cross-reactive anti-DENV antibodies that mediate complement-dependent virolysis may lower the risk of severe disease, informing the development of effective dengue vaccines and therapeutics.
Keywords: CP: Immunology; CP: Microbiology; Zika virus; biomarker; cohort; dengue virus; immune correlate; pre-infection; virolysis.
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