An attenuated replication-competent chikungunya virus with a fluorescently tagged envelope

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Abstract

Background: Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is the most common alphavirus infecting humans worldwide, causing acute and chronically debilitating arthralgia at a great economic expense. Methodology/Principal findings: To facilitate our study of CHIKV, we generated a mCherry tagged replication-competent chimeric virus, CHIKV 37997-mCherry. Single particle cryoEM demonstrated icosahedral organization of the chimeric virus and the display of mCherry proteins on virus surface. CHIKV 37997-mCherry is attenuated in both IFNαR knockout and wild-type mice. Strong anti-CHIKV and anti-mCherry antibody responses were induced in CHIKV 37997-mCherry infected mice. Conclusions/Significance: Our work suggests that chimeric alphaviruses displaying foreign antigen can serve as vaccines against both aphaviruses and other pathogens and diseases.

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Jin, J., Sherman, M. B., Chafets, D., Dinglasan, N., Lu, K., Lee, T. H., … Simmons, G. (2018). An attenuated replication-competent chikungunya virus with a fluorescently tagged envelope. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 12(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006693

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