| Literature DB >> 29263913 |
Yuhua Li1,2, Yin Fu1, Xinyu Liu1, Huiqiang Yang3, Yongxin Yu1, Lili Jia1, Xuguang Li4, Aaron Farnsworth4, Junzhi Wang1.
Abstract
In the course of isolating the attenuated Japanese encephalitis vaccine SA14-14-2, two attenuated strains SA14-9-7 and SA14-5-3 were also obtained that elicited low antibody responses in humans (<10% and 62%, respectively) and exerted much weaker immune protection in animal challenge experiments. However, the reason for these differences remains unknown. In order to understand why SA14-14-2 is superior to SA14-9-7 and SA14-5-3, we employed a reverse genetics method to identify the key mutations in the virus genome that determine the immunogenicity of live attenuated Japanese encephalitis viruses. We first sequenced the full genomic sequences of SA14-9-7 and SA14-5-3 and found mutations that changed four amino-acid base pairs when compared to the envelope gene of SA14-14-2. We mutated the genome of SA14-14-2 to generate these mutations both singly (E-177, E-264, E-279 and E-315) and in combination (E-177/264, E-279/315 and E-177/264/279/315) and tested these mutants along with parental strains SA14-14-2, SA14-9-7 and SA14-5-3 for their immunogenicity in vivo. When mice were immunized with SA14-9-7 and SA14-5-3, lower levels of neutralizing antibodies were generated compared with the immune response to SA14-14-2. Furthermore, SA14-5-3 was more immunogenic than SA14-9-7, which replicated the results previously seen in humans. Point mutations E-177, E-264, E-279 and E-315 diminished the immunogenicity of SA14-14-2 with E-264 and E-315, contributing the most to this phenotype. The mutant rJEV (E-177/E-264/E-279/E-315) containing all four point mutations exhibited the lowest immunogenicity with a seroconversion rate of 0 at an inoculation dose of 103 PFU (plaque-forming unit). We have identified the key amino acids in the envelope protein that account for the superior immunogenicity of SA14-14-2.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29263913 PMCID: PMC5661631 DOI: 10.1038/sigtrans.2017.5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Signal Transduct Target Ther ISSN: 2059-3635
Primers to sequence JEV
| P1 | P1L:5′- AGAAGTTTATCTGTGTGAACTTCTTGG-3′ | 1–27 |
| P1R:5′- TATCGAAGGAGCATTGGG-3′ | 1488–1505 | |
| P2 | P2L:5′- GAGAAGCCCACAACGAGAAG-3′ | 1210–1229 |
| P2R:5′- GAATCGTAGGGGCGGAAG 3′ | 3428–3446 | |
| P3 | P3L:5′- GAACTCATCATTCCGCATACCATAG-3′ | 3195–3220 |
| P3R:5′- CCATTTTCGGTCAAACCTCC-3′ | 4855–4874 | |
| P4 | P4L:5′- TAGCCGCCCTCACGCCTTG-3′ | 4534–4552 |
| P4R:5′- CAGTGCATCTGGCAGCTCTTCG-3′ | 6596–6617 | |
| P5 | P5L:5′- GGAAAATCCTCAAGCCGAGAT-3′ | 6373–6393 |
| P5R:5′- TCAGGAGCCTTCGTGTCAACT-3′ | 8706–8726 | |
| P6 | P6L:5′- CAGGTACTACTGGGGCGAATG-3′ | 8388–8408 |
| P6R:5′- TCCTCTGCACGGGACAACTAT-3′ | 9861–9881 | |
| P7 | P7L:5′- AAGACCGTGATGGACGTGATATC-3′ | 9444–9466 |
| P7R:5′- AGATCCTGTGTTCTTCCTCACC-3′ | 10 952–10 977 |
Abbreviations: JEV, Japanese encephalitis virus; nt, nucleotide.
Primers for constructing JEV-infectious DNA clone
| F1 | 5′-
TT |
| R1 | 5′-
CCT |
| F2 | 5′-
TT |
| R3 | 5′-
GG |
| F4 | 5′-
TGCGGAGTC |
| R4 | 5′-
CATTTTCTG |
| F5 | 5′-
CGCCCCTACGAT |
| R6 | 5′-
GGAAAA |
| F7 | 5′-
ACCAC |
| R8 | 5′-
CCG |
| F9 | 5′-
CACC |
| R10 | 5′-
CCG |
| F11 | 5′-
GCTTGGAGCACGGTA |
| R11 | 5′-
CCG |
Abbreviation: JEV, Japanese encephalitis virus. Underline entities are the restriction enzyme.
Figure 1Construction of pACNR-JEV5ʹ and pACNR-JEV3ʹ plasmid. Seven fragments of JEV14-14-2 gene were obtained by PCR. The first three and the other four fragments were ligated and constructed into low-copy plasmid pACNR. The resulting plasmids were named pACNR-JEV5ʹ and pACNR-JEV3ʹ that contains JEV sequence from 1 to 3450 nt and from 3445 to 10 977 nt.
Figure 2Construction of a plasmid that contains the full-length JEV genome. pACNR-JEV3ʹ was digested with BspEI and XhoI. The 7.5 kb DNA fragment was harvested and ligated into pACNR-JEV5ʹ, which was digested by the same restriction enzymes. The final plasmid DNA was named pACNR-JEV (1–10 977) that bears the complete JEV genome sequence.
Primers used to generate JEV mutations
| 177-F | 5′-
CCAATGCTCCTTCGGTA | G to A |
| 177-R | 5′-
GTTTGAGGG | C to T |
| 264-F | 5′-
GAAGGAGGCCTCCATCA | T to G |
| 264-R | 5′-
CAACGC | A to C |
| 279-F | 5′ -
GTACTCAAGCTCAGTGA | T to A |
| 279-R | 5′-
CCTGATGTTAAC | A to T |
| 315-F | 5′-
GAAAAATCCGG | T to C |
| 315-R | 5′-
GTGACCAGTGTCC | A to G |
| F | 5′-
TT | A to C silent mutation |
| R | 5′-
GG |
Abbreviation: JEV, Japanese encephalitis virus. Bold is the location of the mutation. The underline entities are the restriction enzyme sites.
Figure 3Amino-acid mutations of each new JEV strains. Compared with SA14-14-2, SA14-9-7 and SA14-5-3 had also stable attenuated neurovirulence but poor immunogenicity in human clinical trials. In order to study the mechanism of the different immunogenicity of SA14-14-2, the critical amino acids in E protein of SA14-14-2 have been mutated to counterparts of SA14-9-7 and SA14-5-3 both singly (E-177, E-264, E-279 and E-315) and in combination (E-177/264, E-279/315 and E-177/264/279/315). These mutant viruses named as rJEV(E-177), rJEV(E-264), rJEV(E-279), rJEV(E-315), rJEV(E-177/264), rJEV(E-279/315) and rJEV(E-177/264/279/315) were generated and then the immunogenicity of mutants investigated.
Figure 4Cytopathic effect caused by mutant JEV. (a) Untransfected BKH21 cells; (b) transfected with rJEV(E-177) RNA. BHK21 cells were transfected with JEV RNA. Images shown are cells 5 days after transfection. Representative image of cells transfected with rJEV(E-177) RNA is shown.
Titers of neutralizing antibodies elicited by mutated JEV in mice
| SA14-14-2 | 100 | 100 | 28.3 | 50.4 |
| SA14-5-3 | 33.3 | 83.3 | 2.2 | 17.2 |
| rJEV (E-177) | 66.7 | 83 | 4.6 | 24.3 |
| rJEV (E-264) | 16.7 | 50 | 1.6 | 4 |
| rJEV (177/264) | 50 | 83 | 3.2 | 30.6 |
| SA14-9-7 | 0 | 66.7 | 0 | 8.3 |
| rJEV (E-279) | 66.7 | 100 | 7.4 | 44.9 |
| rJEV (E-315) | 16.7 | 83.3 | 2.1 | 7.6 |
| rJEV (E-279/315) | 66.7 | 33.3 | 9.3 | 2.7 |
| rJEV (E-177/264/279/315) | 0 | 33.3 | 0 | 3 |
Abbreviations: GMT, geometric mean titer; JEV, Japanese encephalitis virus; PFU, plaque-forming unit.
Protection capacity of attenuated JEV strains
| SA14-14-2 | s.c. | 10 | 3/9 | 0.83 |
| s.c. | 100 | 1/10 | ||
| s.c. | 1000 | 0/10 | ||
| SA14-5-3 | s.c. | 10 | 8/10 | 2.8 |
| s.c. | 100 | 8/10 | ||
| s.c. | 1000 | 6/10 | ||
| rJEV (E-177) | s.c. | 10 | 5/10 | 1 |
| s.c. | 100 | 0/10 | ||
| s.c. | 1000 | 0/10 | ||
| rJEV (E-264) | s.c. | 10 | 4/10 | 1.11 |
| s.c. | 100 | 3/10 | ||
| s.c. | 1000 | 0/10 | ||
| rJEV (E-177/264) | s.c. | 10 | 3/10 | 0.86 |
| s.c. | 100 | 2/10 | ||
| s.c | 1000 | 0/10 | ||
| SA14-9-7 | s.c. | 10 | 8/10 | 2.89 |
| s.c. | 100 | 8/9 | ||
| s.c. | 1000 | 6/10 | ||
| rJEV (E-279) | s.c. | 10 | 6/10 | 1.67 |
| s.c. | 100 | 4/10 | ||
| s.c. | 1000 | 2/10 | ||
| rJEV (E-315) | s.c. | 10 | 8/10 | 2.38 |
| s.c. | 100 | 8/10 | ||
| s.c. | 1000 | 2/10 | ||
| rJEV (E-279/315) | s.c. | 10 | 8/10 | 2.28 |
| s.c. | 100 | 7/10 | ||
| s.c. | 1000 | 2/10 | ||
| rJEV (E-177/264/279/315) | s.c. | 10 | 9/10 | 1.84 |
| s.c. | 100 | 4/10 | ||
| s.c. | 1000 | 1/10 |
Abbreviations: JEV, Japanese encephalitis virus; PFU, plaque-forming unit; s.c., subcutaneous.