Literature DB >> 19941901

Refined methods for propagating vesicular stomatitis virus vectors that are defective for G protein expression.

Susan E Witko1, J Erik Johnson, Narender K Kalyan, Barbara K Felber, George N Pavlakis, Maninder K Sidhu, R Michael Hendry, Stephen A Udem, Christopher L Parks.   

Abstract

Propagation-defective vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) vectors that encode a truncated G protein (VSV-Gstem) or lack the G gene entirely (VSV-DeltaG) are attractive vaccine vectors because they are immunogenic, cannot replicate and spread after vaccination, and do not express many of the epitopes that elicit neutralizing anti-VSV immunity. To consider advancing non-propagating VSV vectors towards clinical assessment, scalable technology that is compliant with human vaccine manufacturing must be developed to produce clinical trial material. Accordingly, two propagation methods were developed for VSV-Gstem and VSV-DeltaG vectors encoding HIV gag that have the potential to support large-scale production. One method is based on transient expression of G protein after electroporating plasmid DNA into Vero cells and the second is based on a stable Vero cell line that contains a G gene controlled by a heat shock-inducible transcription unit. Both methods reproducibly supported production of 1 x 10(7) to 1 x 10(8) infectious units (I.U.s) of vaccine vector per milliliter. Results from these studies also showed that optimization of the G gene is necessary for abundant G protein expression from electroporated plasmid DNA or from DNA integrated in the genome of a stable cell line, and that the titers of VSV-Gstem vectors generally exceeded VSV-DeltaG. Copyright (c) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19941901      PMCID: PMC2837098          DOI: 10.1016/j.jviromet.2009.11.023

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Virol Methods        ISSN: 0166-0934            Impact factor:   2.014


  76 in total

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4.  The membrane-proximal domain of vesicular stomatitis virus G protein functions as a membrane fusion potentiator and can induce hemifusion.

Authors:  E Jeetendra; Clinton S Robison; Lorraine M Albritton; Michael A Whitt
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2002-12       Impact factor: 5.103

5.  Adjuvanticity of an IL-12 fusion protein expressed by recombinant deltaG-vesicular stomatitis virus.

Authors:  Sheri D Klas; Clinton S Robison; Michael A Whitt; Mark A Miller
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9.  Infectivity of a human respiratory syncytial virus lacking the SH, G, and F proteins is efficiently mediated by the vesicular stomatitis virus G protein.

Authors:  A G P Oomens; A G Megaw; G W Wertz
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 5.103

10.  The membrane-proximal region of vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein G ectodomain is critical for fusion and virus infectivity.

Authors:  E Jeetendra; Kakoli Ghosh; Derek Odell; Jin Li; Hara P Ghosh; Michael A Whitt
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2003-12       Impact factor: 5.103

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2.  Neurovirulence and immunogenicity of attenuated recombinant vesicular stomatitis viruses in nonhuman primates.

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Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2014-04-02       Impact factor: 5.103

3.  Single-dose replication-defective VSV-based Nipah virus vaccines provide protection from lethal challenge in Syrian hamsters.

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