Literature DB >> 15140975

Recombinant respiratory syncytial viruses lacking the C-terminal third of the attachment (G) protein are immunogenic and attenuated in vivo and in vitro.

Matthew B Elliott1, Karin S Pryharski, Qingzhong Yu, Christopher L Parks, Todd S Laughlin, C Kanta Gupta, Robert A Lerch, Valerie B Randolph, Natisha A LaPierre, Kristen M Heers Dack, Gerald E Hancock.   

Abstract

The design of attenuated vaccines for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) historically focused on viruses made sensitive to physiologic temperature through point mutations in the genome. These prototype vaccines were not suitable for human infants primarily because of insufficient attenuation, genetic instability, and reversion to a less-attenuated phenotype. We therefore sought to construct novel attenuated viruses with less potential for reversion through genetic alteration of the attachment G protein. Complete deletion of G protein was previously shown to result in RSV strains overly attenuated for replication in mice. Using reverse genetics, recombinant RSV (rRSV) strains were engineered with truncations at amino acid 118, 174, 193, or 213 and respectively designated rA2cpDeltaG118, rA2cpDeltaG174, rA2cpDeltaG193, and rA2cpDeltaG213. All rA2cpDeltaG strains were attenuated for growth in vitro and in the respiratory tracts of BALB/c mice but not restricted for growth at 37 degrees C. The mutations did not significantly affect nascent genome synthesis in human lung epithelial (A549) cells, but infectious rA2cpDeltaG virus shed into the culture medium was dramatically diminished. Hence, the data suggested that a site within the C-terminal 85 amino acids of G protein is important for efficient genome packaging or budding of RSV from the infected cell. Vaccination with the rA2cpDeltaG strains also generated efficacious immune responses in mice that were similar to those elicited by the temperature-sensitive cpts248/404 strain previously tested in human infants. Collectively, the data indicate that the rA2cpDeltaG strains are immunogenic, not likely to revert to the less-attenuated phenotype, and thus candidates for further development as vaccines against RSV.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15140975      PMCID: PMC415824          DOI: 10.1128/JVI.78.11.5773-5783.2004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Virol        ISSN: 0022-538X            Impact factor:   5.103


  73 in total

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Review 4.  Clinical experience with respiratory syncytial virus vaccines.

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5.  Genetic studies of respiratory syncytial virus temperature-sensitive mutants.

Authors:  P F Wright; M A Gharpure; D S Hodes; R M Chanock
Journal:  Arch Gesamte Virusforsch       Date:  1973

6.  Low-temperature-grown RS virus in adult volunteers.

Authors:  W T Friedewald; B R Forsyth; C B Smith; M A Gharpure; R M Chanock
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Authors:  Gerald E Hancock; Paul W Tebbey; Catherine A Scheuer; Karin S Pryharski; Kristen M Heers; Natisha A LaPierre
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9.  Respiratory syncytial virus mRNA coding assignments.

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10.  Clinical and immunological response of infants and children to administration of low-temperature adapted respiratory syncytial virus.

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  3 in total

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2.  Characterization of recombinant respiratory syncytial viruses with the region responsible for type 2 T-cell responses and pulmonary eosinophilia deleted from the attachment (G) protein.

Authors:  Matthew B Elliott; Karin S Pryharski; Qingzhong Yu; L A Boutilier; N Campeol; K Melville; Todd S Laughlin; C K Gupta; Robert A Lerch; Valerie B Randolph; Natisha A LaPierre; Kristen M Heers Dack; Gerald E Hancock
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2004-08       Impact factor: 5.103

Review 3.  Sendai virus as a backbone for vaccines against RSV and other human paramyxoviruses.

Authors:  Charles J Russell; Julia L Hurwitz
Journal:  Expert Rev Vaccines       Date:  2015-12-09       Impact factor: 5.217

  3 in total

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