Abstract
Infectious clone technologies allow the rational design of live attenuated viral vaccines with the possibility of vaccine-driven coexpression of immunomodulatory molecules for additional vaccine safety and efficacy. The latter could lead to novel strategies for vaccine protection against infectious diseases where traditional approaches have failed. Here we show for the flavivirus Murray Valley encephalitis virus (MVEV) that incorporation of the internal ribosome entry site (IRES) of Encephalomyocarditis virus between the capsid and prM genes strongly attenuated virulence and that the resulting bicistronic virus was both genetically stable and potently immunogenic. Furthermore, the novel bicistronic genome organization facilitated the generation of a recombinant virus carrying an beta interferon (IFN-beta) gene. Given the importance of IFNs in limiting virus dissemination and in efficient induction of memory B and T cell antiviral immunity, we hypothesized that coexpression of the cytokine with the live vaccine might further increase virulence attenuation without loss of immunogenicity. We found that bicistronic mouse IFN-beta coexpressing MVEV yielded high virus and IFN titers in cultured cells that do not respond to the coexpressed IFN. However, in IFN response-sufficient cell cultures and mice, the virus produced a self-limiting infection. Nevertheless, the attenuated virus triggered robust innate and adaptive immune responses evidenced by the induced expression of Mx proteins (used as a sensitive biomarker for measuring the type I IFN response) and the generation of neutralizing antibodies, respectively. © 2014, American Society for Microbiology.
Author supplied keywords
- *Murray Valley encephalitis virus vaccine/ce [Intr
- *Murray Valley encephalitis virus vaccine/ip [Intr
- *beta interferon
- *internal ribosome entry site
- *virus vaccine/ce [Intracerebral Drug Administrati
- *virus vaccine/ip [Intraperitoneal Drug Administra
- Encephalomyocarditis virus
- Flavivirus infection
- Murray Valley encephalitis virus
- Myxovirus resistance protein/ec [Endogenous Compou
- adaptive immunity
- animal cell
- animal experiment
- animal model
- antibody titer
- article
- controlled study
- embryo
- female
- genetic stability
- immunogenetics
- immunogenicity
- innate immunity
- male
- memory T lymphocyte
- memory cell
- mouse
- neutralizing antibody/ec [Endogenous Compound]
- nonhuman
- nucleotide sequence
- priority journal
- unclassified drug
- virus attenuation
- virus capsid
- virus immunity
- virus replication
- virus virulence
Cite
CITATION STYLE
M., F., E., L., M., L., P.S., L., S., R., K.I., M., … I., R. (2014). Internal ribosome entry site-based attenuation of a flavivirus candidate vaccine and evaluation of the effect of beta interferon coexpression on vaccine properties. Journal of Virology, 88(4), 2056–2070. Retrieved from http://jvi.asm.org/content/88/4/2056.full.pdf http://ovidsp.ovid.com/ovidweb.cgi?T=JS&PAGE=reference&D=emed15&NEWS=N&AN=372296377
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