| Literature DB >> 21994647 |
James S Robertson1, Othmar G Engelhardt1.
Abstract
Influenza vaccine manufacturers require antigenically relevant vaccine viruses that have good manufacturing properties and are safe to use. In developing pandemic vaccine viruses, reverse genetics has been employed as a rational approach that can also be used effectively to attenuate the highly virulent H5N1 virus and at the same time place the H5 HA and N1 NA on a background of PR8, a virus that has been used over many decades to provide high yielding vaccine viruses. Reverse genetics has also been used successfully alongside classical reassorting techniques in the development of (swine flu) pandemic A(H1N1)v vaccine viruses.Entities:
Keywords: H1N1v virus; H5N1 virus; pandemic influenza vaccines; reverse genetics
Year: 2010 PMID: 21994647 PMCID: PMC3185603 DOI: 10.3390/v2020532
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.818
Figure 1.Diagrammatic representation of the classical reassortment of influenza viruses.
Figure 2.Diagrammatic representation of the reverse genetics process in generating a 6:2 reassortant virus containing the six internal genome segments from PR8 and two genome segments (the HA and NA encoding segments) from a wild type virus.
Available H5N1 vaccine viruses (as of September 2009) .
| A/Vietnam/1203/2004 | CDC; SJ/HKU/NIAID | |
| A/Vietnam/1194/2004 | NIBSC | |
| A/Cambodia/R0405050/2007 | NIBSC | |
| A/Indonesia/5/2005 | CDC | |
| A/duck/Hunan/795/2002 | SJ/HKU/NIAID | |
| A/bar-headed goose/Qinghai/1A/2005 | SJ/HKU/NIAID | |
| A/whooper swan/Mongolia/244/2005 | SJ/NIAID | |
| A/chicken/India/NIV33487/2006 | CDC/NIV | |
| A/Egypt/3300-NAMURU3/2008 | CDC | |
| A/turkey/Turkey/1/2005 | NIBSC | |
| A/Egypt/2321/2007 | CDC | |
| A/common magpie/Hong Kong/5052/2007 | SJ/HKU/NIAID | |
| A/Anhui/1/2005 | CDC | |
| A/Japanese white-eye/Hong Kong/1038/2006 | SJ/HKU/NIAID | |
| A/duck/Laos/3295/2006 | FDA | |
| A/goose/Guiyang/337/2006 | SJ/HKU/NIAID | |
| A/chicken/Vietnam/NCVD-03/2008-like | CDC | |
Reproduced with permission from reference [31] (World Health Organization).
CDC–Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, USA; FDA–Food and Drug Administration, USA; NIAID–National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, NIH, USA; NIBSC–National Institute for Biological Standards and Control, UK; NIV–National Institute of Virology, India; SJ–St Jude Children’s Research Hospital, USA; HKU–University of Hong Kong, China Hong Kong SAR.
NIBSC library of pandemic vaccine viruses.
| A/duck/Singapore-Q/F119-3/1997 | ARIV-1 | |
| A/Hong Kong/213/2003 | NIBRG-12 | |
| A/Vietnam/1194/2004 | NIBRG-14 | |
| A/Cambodia/R0405050/2007 | NIBRG-88 | |
| A/turkey/Turkey/1/2005 | NIBRG-23 | |
| A/turkey/Italy/3889/1999 (low path) | wt | |
| A/mallard/Netherlands/12/2000 | NIBRG-60 | |
| A/mallard/Netherlands/12/2000 | NIBRG-63 | |
| A/New York/107/2003 | NIBRG-109 | |
| A/Hong Kong/1073/1999 (G1 lineage) | wt | |
| A/chicken/Hong Kong/G9/1997(G9 lineage) | NIBRG-91 | |
| A/mallard/England/727/2006 | NIBRG-107 |
A classically derived reassortant.
All vaccine viruses coded ‘NIBRG’ are reverse genetics derived.
Available pandemic H1N1v 2009 vaccine viruses (as of October 2009) .
| Parent virus | Vaccine virus | Developing institute | Available since |
|---|---|---|---|
| A/California/07/2009 | Wild type | CDC | May 09 |
| X-179A | NYMC | 27 May 09 | |
| IVR-153 | CSL | 04 June 09 | |
| X-181 | NYMC | 14 Sept 09 | |
| X-181A | NYMC | 14 Sept 09 | |
| NIBRG-121 | NIBSC | 27 May 09 | |
| NIBRG-121xp | NIBSC | 06 Aug 09 | |
| A/California/04/2009 | Wild type | CDC | May 09 |
| CBER-RG2 | CBER | 19 June 09 | |
| A/Texas/5/2009 | Wild type | CDC | May 09 |
| IDCDC-RG15 | CDC | 27 May 09 | |
| IDCDC-RG20 | CDC | 22 July 09 | |
| A/England/195/2009 | Wild type | NIBSC | May 09 |
| NIBRG-122 | NIBSC | 22 July 09 | |
| A/Texas/5/2009 & A/New York/18/2009 | IDCDC-RG18 | CDC | 22 July 09 |
| A/New York/18/2009 | IDCDC-RG22 | CDC | 22 July 09 |
Reproduced with permission from reference [51] (World Health Organization).
CBER–Centers for Biologics Evaluation and Research, USA; CDC–Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, USA; CSL–Commonwealth Serum Laboratories, Australia; NYMC–New York Medical College, USA; NIBSC–National Institute for Biological Standards and Control, UK.
classical reassortant
reverse genetics derived