| Literature DB >> 31826984 |
Jody Hobson-Peters1, Jessica J Harrison2, Daniel Watterson2, Jessamine E Hazlewood3, Laura J Vet2, Natalee D Newton2, David Warrilow4, Agathe M G Colmant2, Carmel Taylor4, Bixing Huang4, Thisun B H Piyasena2, Weng Kong Chow5, Yin Xiang Setoh2, Bing Tang3, Eri Nakayama6, Kexin Yan3, Alberto A Amarilla2, Sarah Wheatley4, Peter R Moore4, Mitchell Finger4, Nina Kurucz7, Naphak Modhiran2, Paul R Young2, Alexander A Khromykh2, Helle Bielefeldt-Ohmann2,8, Andreas Suhrbier2,3, Roy A Hall1.
Abstract
Flaviviruses such as dengue, yellow fever, Zika, West Nile, and Japanese encephalitis virus present substantial global health burdens. New vaccines are being sought to address safety and manufacturing issues associated with current live attenuated vaccines. Here, we describe a new insect-specific flavivirus, Binjari virus, which was found to be remarkably tolerant for exchange of its structural protein genes (prME) with those of the aforementioned pathogenic vertebrate-infecting flaviviruses (VIFs). Chimeric BinJ/VIF-prME viruses remained replication defective in vertebrate cells but replicated with high efficiency in mosquito cells. Cryo-electron microscopy and monoclonal antibody binding studies illustrated that the chimeric BinJ/VIF-prME virus particles were structurally and immunologically similar to their parental VIFs. Pilot manufacturing in C6/36 cells suggests that high yields can be reached up to 109.5 cell culture infectious dose/ml or ≈7 mg/liter. BinJ/VIF-prME viruses showed utility in diagnostic (microsphere immunoassays and ELISAs using panels of human and equine sera) and vaccine applications (illustrating protection against Zika virus challenge in murine IFNAR-/- mouse models). BinJ/VIF-prME viruses thus represent a versatile, noninfectious (for vertebrate cells), high-yield technology for generating chimeric flavivirus particles with low biocontainment requirements.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31826984 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aax7888
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956