Demonstration of co-infection and trans-encapsidation of viral RNA in vitro using epitope-tagged foot-and-mouth disease viruses

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Abstract

Foot-and-mouth disease, caused by foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV), is an economi-cally devastating disease affecting several important livestock species. FMDV is antigenically diverse and exists as seven serotypes comprised of many strains which are poorly cross-neutralised by antibodies induced by infection or vaccination. Co-infection and recombination are important drivers of antigenic diversity, especially in regions where several serotypes co-circulate at high prevalence, and therefore experimental systems to study these events in vitro would be beneficial. Here we have utilised recombinant FMDVs containing an HA or a FLAG epitope tag within the VP1 capsid protein to investigate the products of co-infection in vitro. Co-infection with viruses from the same and from different serotypes was demonstrated by immunofluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry using anti-tag antibodies. FLAG-tagged VP1 and HA-tagged VP1 could be co-immunoprecipitated from co-infected cells, suggesting that newly synthesised capsids may contain VP1 proteins from both co-infecting viruses. Furthermore, we provide the first demonstration of trans-encapsidation of an FMDV genome into capsids comprised of proteins encoded by a co-infecting heterologous virus. This system provides a useful tool for investigating co-infection dynamics in vitro, particularly between closely related strains, and has the advantage that it does not depend upon the availability of strain-specific FMDV antibodies.

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Childs, K., Juleff, N., Moffat, K., & Seago, J. (2021). Demonstration of co-infection and trans-encapsidation of viral RNA in vitro using epitope-tagged foot-and-mouth disease viruses. Viruses, 13(12). https://doi.org/10.3390/v13122433

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