| Literature DB >> 23978242 |
Guangyu Zhao1, Lanying Du, Cuiqing Ma, Ye Li, Lin Li, Vincent Km Poon, Lili Wang, Fei Yu, Bo-Jian Zheng, Shibo Jiang, Yusen Zhou.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evidence points to the emergence of a novel human coronavirus, Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV), which causes a severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)-like disease. In response, the development of effective vaccines and therapeutics remains a clinical priority. To accomplish this, it is necessary to evaluate neutralizing antibodies and screen for MERS-CoV entry inhibitors.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23978242 PMCID: PMC3765664 DOI: 10.1186/1743-422X-10-266
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Cell lines used for detection of MERS-CoV pseudovirus infectivity and receptor DPP4 expression
| Huh-7 | Human liver | Dr. Charles M. Rice at Rockefeller University | |
| HEP-G2 | Human liver | ATCC | |
| HT-1080 | Human fibrosarcoma | ATCC | |
| MT-2 | Human lymphocyte | NIH AIDS Reagent Program | |
| Hep-2 | Human respiratory tract | ATCC | |
| Caco-2 | Human intestinal tract | ATCC | |
| HeLa | Human genitourinary tract | ATCC | |
| 293T | Human kidney | ATCC | |
| ACE2-293T | 293T-derived cells | Laboratory stock | Express SARS-CoV receptor ACE2 |
| A549 | Human lung | ATCC | |
| NBL-7 | Mink lung | ATCC | Mv1Lu |
| PK15 | Pig kidney | ATCC | |
| MDCK | Canine kidney | ATCC | |
| FRhK-4 | Fetal rhesus monkey kidney | ATCC | |
| Vero | African green monkey kidney | ATCC | |
| Vero E6 | African green monkey kidney | ATCC | Vero C1008 |
| MA-104 | African green monkey kidney | ATCC |
Figure 1Detection of MERS-CoV pseudovirus infectivity. Cell tropism of MERS-CoV pseudovirus in a variety of target cells from human and non-human hosts. VSV-G and Env- pseudoviruses were used as positive and negative controls, respectively. The data are expressed as mean relative luciferase units (RLU) ± standard deviation (SD) of 4 parallel wells in 96-well culture plates. The experiment was repeated three times, and similar results were obtained.
Figure 2Detection of MERS-CoV S and HIV-1 p24 protein expression in the packaged MERS-CoV pseudovirus and DPP4 protein expression in target cells by Western blot. (A) Detection of p24 and MERS-CoV S in pseudotyped MERS-CoV. Anti-p24 (1:50) and MERS-CoV S-specific polyclonal antibodies (1:200) were used for the test. (B-C) Detection of DPP4 expression in different cell lines. Goat anti-DPP4 (1 μg/ml) was used for the test, and anti-β-actin monoclonal antibodies (1:5,000, Sigma) were applied as the internal control.
Figure 3Detection of neutralizing antibodies of vaccinated sera against MERS-CoV infection. Mice were vaccinated with a recombinant protein expressing RBD of MERS-CoV S protein, and representative sera (Sera 1–3) collected from 10 days post-2nd vaccine were used for the test. Control sera were collected from mice injected with PBS. (A) MERS-CoV pseudovirus-based inhibition assay in DPP4-expreesing Huh-7 cells. The data are presented as mean percentages of inhibition ± SD of duplicate wells. (B) MERS-CoV live virus-based inhibition assay in Vero E6 cells. The titers were determined as the highest serum dilutions that completely prevent CPE in at least 50% of the wells (NT50) and are expressed as mean ± SD. The experiment was repeated three times, and similar results were obtained.
Figure 4Detection of inhibitory ability of synthetic compounds against MERS-CoV pseudovirus infection. Compounds (HP-HSA and ADS-J1) and peptides (C34 and T20) were tested for the inhibition of MERS-CoV pseudovirus entry into target NBL-7 (A) and Huh-7 cells (B) at concentrations of 20 and 2.5 μM, respectively. VSV-G pseudotype was included as the negative control. (3) Detection of the potential cytotoxicity of the compounds to Huh-7 cells. The data are presented as mean percentages of inhibition (or cytotoxicity) ± SD of duplicate wells. The experiment was repeated three times, and similar results were obtained.