| Literature DB >> 27934767 |
Longlong Si1, Huan Xu1, Xueying Zhou1, Ziwei Zhang1, Zhenyu Tian1, Yan Wang1, Yiming Wu1, Bo Zhang1, Zhenlan Niu1, Chuanling Zhang1, Ge Fu1, Sulong Xiao1, Qing Xia1, Lihe Zhang1, Demin Zhou2.
Abstract
The conversion of life-threatening viruses into live but avirulent vaccines represents a revolution in vaccinology. In a proof-of-principle study, we expanded the genetic code of the genome of influenza A virus via a transgenic cell line containing orthogonal translation machinery. This generated premature termination codon (PTC)-harboring viruses that exerted full infectivity but were replication-incompetent in conventional cells. Genome-wide optimization of the sites for incorporation of multiple PTCs resulted in highly reproductive and genetically stable progeny viruses in transgenic cells. In mouse, ferret, and guinea pig models, vaccination with PTC viruses elicited robust humoral, mucosal, and T cell-mediated immunity against antigenically distinct influenza viruses and even neutralized existing infecting strains. The methods presented here may become a general approach for generating live virus vaccines that can be adapted to almost any virus.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27934767 DOI: 10.1126/science.aah5869
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728