Literature DB >> 22468165

The double-edged sword: How evolution can make or break a live-attenuated virus vaccine.

Kathryn A Hanley1.   

Abstract

Even students who reject evolution are often willing to consider cases in which evolutionary biology contributes to, or undermines, biomedical interventions. Moreover the intersection of evolutionary biology and biomedicine is fascinating in its own right. This review offers an overview of the ways in which evolution has impacted the design and deployment of live-attenuated virus vaccines, with subsections that may be useful as lecture material or as the basis for case studies in classes at a variety of levels. Live- attenuated virus vaccines have been modified in ways that restrain their replication in a host, so that infection (vaccination) produces immunity but not disease. Applied evolution, in the form of serial passage in novel host cells, is a "classical" method to generate live-attenuated viruses. However many live-attenuated vaccines exhibit reversion to virulence through back-mutation of attenuating mutations, compensatory mutations elsewhere in the genome, recombination or reassortment, or changes in quasispecies diversity. Additionally the combination of multiple live-attenuated strains may result in competition or facilitation between individual vaccine viruses, resulting in undesirable increases in virulence or decreases in immunogenicity. Genetic engineering informed by evolutionary thinking has led to a number of novel approaches to generate live-attenuated virus vaccines that contain substantial safeguards against reversion to virulence and that ameliorate interference among multiple vaccine strains. Finally, vaccines have the potential to shape the evolution of their wild type counterparts in counter-productive ways; at the extreme vaccine-driven eradication of a virus may create an empty niche that promotes the emergence of new viral pathogens.

Entities:  

Year:  2011        PMID: 22468165      PMCID: PMC3314307          DOI: 10.1007/s12052-011-0365-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Evolution (N Y)        ISSN: 1936-6426


  81 in total

1.  Highly divergent neurovirulent vaccine-derived polioviruses of all three serotypes are recurrently detected in Finnish sewage.

Authors:  M Roivainen; S Blomqvist; H Al-Hello; A Paananen; F Delpeyroux; F Delpeyreux; M Kuusi; T Hovi
Journal:  Euro Surveill       Date:  2010-05-13

2.  Design of chimeric alphaviruses with a programmed, attenuated, cell type-restricted phenotype.

Authors:  Dal Young Kim; Svetlana Atasheva; Niall J Foy; Eryu Wang; Elena I Frolova; Scott Weaver; Ilya Frolov
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2011-02-23       Impact factor: 5.103

3.  Economic evaluation of the 7-vaccine routine childhood immunization schedule in the United States, 2001.

Authors:  Fangjun Zhou; Jeanne Santoli; Mark L Messonnier; Hussain R Yusuf; Abigail Shefer; Susan Y Chu; Lance Rodewald; Rafael Harpaz
Journal:  Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med       Date:  2005-12

4.  Viral nucleic acids in live-attenuated vaccines: detection of minority variants and an adventitious virus.

Authors:  Joseph G Victoria; Chunlin Wang; Morris S Jones; Crystal Jaing; Kevin McLoughlin; Shea Gardner; Eric L Delwart
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2010-04-07       Impact factor: 5.103

5.  Major increase in human monkeypox incidence 30 years after smallpox vaccination campaigns cease in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Authors:  Anne W Rimoin; Prime M Mulembakani; Sara C Johnston; James O Lloyd Smith; Neville K Kisalu; Timothee L Kinkela; Seth Blumberg; Henri A Thomassen; Brian L Pike; Joseph N Fair; Nathan D Wolfe; Robert L Shongo; Barney S Graham; Pierre Formenty; Emile Okitolonda; Lisa E Hensley; Hermann Meyer; Linda L Wright; Jean-Jacques Muyembe
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-08-30       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus in the mosquito vector Aedes taeniorhynchus: infection initiated by a small number of susceptible epithelial cells and a population bottleneck.

Authors:  Darci R Smith; A Paige Adams; Joan L Kenney; Eryu Wang; Scott C Weaver
Journal:  Virology       Date:  2007-11-19       Impact factor: 3.616

7.  Hepatitis B: the virus and disease.

Authors:  T Jake Liang
Journal:  Hepatology       Date:  2009-05       Impact factor: 17.425

8.  Measles virus vaccine attenuation: suboptimal infection of lymphatic tissue and tropism alteration.

Authors:  Cristian Condack; Jean-Charles Grivel; Patricia Devaux; Leonid Margolis; Roberto Cattaneo
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2007-06-29       Impact factor: 5.226

9.  Homologous recombination is apparent in infectious bursal disease virus.

Authors:  Cheng-Qiang He; Le-Yuan Ma; Dong Wang; Guo-Rong Li; Nai-Zheng Ding
Journal:  Virology       Date:  2008-12-06       Impact factor: 3.616

10.  Experimental infection of North American birds with the New York 1999 strain of West Nile virus.

Authors:  Nicholas Komar; Stanley Langevin; Steven Hinten; Nicole Nemeth; Eric Edwards; Danielle Hettler; Brent Davis; Richard Bowen; Michel Bunning
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 6.883

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  42 in total

1.  Effects of Toll-like receptor stimulation on eosinophilic infiltration in lungs of BALB/c mice immunized with UV-inactivated severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus vaccine.

Authors:  Naoko Iwata-Yoshikawa; Akihiko Uda; Tadaki Suzuki; Yasuko Tsunetsugu-Yokota; Yuko Sato; Shigeru Morikawa; Masato Tashiro; Tetsutaro Sata; Hideki Hasegawa; Noriyo Nagata
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2014-05-21       Impact factor: 5.103

Review 2.  Overview of the Development, Impacts, and Challenges of Live-Attenuated Oral Rotavirus Vaccines.

Authors:  Olufemi Samuel Folorunso; Olihile M Sebolai
Journal:  Vaccines (Basel)       Date:  2020-06-27

Review 3.  Certainty of success: three critical parameters in coronavirus vaccine development.

Authors:  David C Kaslow
Journal:  NPJ Vaccines       Date:  2020-05-25       Impact factor: 7.344

4.  Genetic stability of genome-scale deoptimized RNA virus vaccine candidates under selective pressure.

Authors:  Cyril Le Nouën; Thomas McCarty; Michael Brown; Melissa Laird Smith; Roberto Lleras; Michael A Dolan; Masfique Mehedi; Lijuan Yang; Cindy Luongo; Bo Liang; Shirin Munir; Joshua M DiNapoli; Steffen Mueller; Eckard Wimmer; Peter L Collins; Ursula J Buchholz
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2017-01-03       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 5.  Current trends in tuberculosis vaccine.

Authors:  J S V Soundarya; Uma Devi Ranganathan; Srikanth P Tripathy
Journal:  Med J Armed Forces India       Date:  2019-01-18

6.  Oral vaccines: directed safe passage to the front line of defense.

Authors:  Qing Zhu; Jay A Berzofsky
Journal:  Gut Microbes       Date:  2013-03-14

7.  Coupling mutagenesis and parallel deep sequencing to probe essential residues in a genome or gene.

Authors:  William P Robins; Shah M Faruque; John J Mekalanos
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-02-11       Impact factor: 11.205

8.  In vitro passage selects for Chlamydia muridarum with enhanced infectivity in cultured cells but attenuated pathogenicity in mouse upper genital tract.

Authors:  Chaoqun Chen; Zhou Zhou; Turner Conrad; Zhangsheng Yang; Jin Dai; Zhongyu Li; Yimou Wu; Guangming Zhong
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2015-02-23       Impact factor: 3.441

9.  Virulence-associated genome mutations of murine rotavirus identified by alternating serial passages in mice and cell cultures.

Authors:  Takeshi Tsugawa; Masatoshi Tatsumi; Hiroyuki Tsutsumi
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2014-03-05       Impact factor: 5.103

Review 10.  Arresting Evolution.

Authors:  James J Bull; Jeffrey E Barrick
Journal:  Trends Genet       Date:  2017-10-10       Impact factor: 11.639

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