January 2018
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5 Reads
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12 Citations
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January 2018
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5 Reads
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12 Citations
January 2018
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5 Reads
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6 Citations
March 2015
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147 Reads
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9 Citations
Mutants of influenza virus that encode C-terminally truncated NS1 proteins (NS1-truncated mutants) characteristically induce high interferon responses. The dual activity of interferon in blocking virus replication and enhancing the development of adaptive immune responses makes these mutants promising as self-adjuvanting live-attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) candidates. Yet, among the NS1-truncated mutants, the length of NS1 is not directly correlated with the interferon-inducing efficiency, the level of attenuation, or effectiveness as LAIV. Using quantitative in vitro biologically active particle subpopulation analysis as a tool to identify potential LAIV candidates from a pool of NS1-truncated mutants, we previously predicted that a NS1-truncated mutant pc2, which was less effective as a LAIV in chickens, would be sufficiently effective as a LAIV in mammalian hosts. In this study, we confirmed that pc2 protected mice and pigs against heterologous virus challenge in terms of preventing clinical signs and reducing virus shedding. pc2 expresses a unique SLSYSINWRH motif at the C-terminus of its truncated NS1. Deletion of the SLSYSINWRH motif led to ~821-fold reduction in the peak yield of type I interferon induced in murine cells. Furthermore, replacement of the SLSYSINWRH motif with the wildtype MVKMDQAIMD sequence did not restore the interferon-inducing efficiency. The diminished interferon induction capacity in the absence of the SLSYSINWRH motif was similar to that observed in other mutants which are less effective LAIV candidates. Remarkably, pc2 induced 16-fold or more interferon in human lung and monkey kidney cells compared to the temperature-sensitive, cold-adapted Ann Arbor virus that is currently used as a master backbone for LAIVs such as FluMist. Although the mechanism by which the SLSYSINWRH motif regulates the vaccine properties of pc2 has not been elucidated, this motif has potential use in engineering self-adjuvanting NS1-truncated-based LAIVs.
July 2013
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18 Reads
December 2012
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246 Reads
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24 Citations
Journal of Interferon & Cytokine Research
Reassortment of influenza A viruses is known to affect viability, replication efficiency, antigenicity, host range, and virulence, and can generate pandemic strains. In this study, we demonstrated that the specific exchange of the NS gene segment from highly pathogenic A/HK/156/97 (H5N1) [E92 or E92D NS1] virus for the cognate NS gene segment of A/PR/834(H1N1) [D92 NS1] virus did not cause a significant change in the sizes of infectious particle subpopulations. However, it resulted in 2 new phenotypic changes: (1) de novo generation of large subpopulations of defective-interfering particles (DIPs); and (2) enhancement of interferon (IFN)-inducing particle efficiency leading to an order of magnitude or higher quantum (peak) yield of IFN in both avian and mammalian cells. These changes were attributed to loss of function of the H5N1-NS gene products. Most notably, the NS exchange obliterated the usual IFN-induction-suppressing capacity associated with expression of full-size NS1 proteins, and hence functionally mimicked deletions in the NS1 gene. The loss of NS1-mediated suppression of IFN induction, de novo generation of DIPs, and the concomitant enhancement of IFN-inducing particle efficiency suggest that in an attenuated background, the H5N1-NS could be used to formulate a self-adjuvanting live attenuated influenza vaccine similar to viruses with deletions in the NS1 gene.
November 2012
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62 Reads
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4 Citations
Journal of Interferon & Cytokine Research
Influenza virus populations contain several subpopulations of noninfectious biologically active particles that are measured by the unique phenotypes they express. Two of these subpopulations were studied: (1) interferon (IFN)-inducing particles (IFP) and (2) IFN induction-suppressing particles (ISP). ISP are dominant in cells coinfected with one or more IFP; they completely suppress IFN production in cells otherwise programmed to induce it. Influenza virus ISP were shown to act in host cells in a nonspecific and global manner, suppressing IFN induction independent of the family of viruses serving as IFN inducers. ISP must be present within the first 3 h of coinfection with IFP to be maximally effective; by 7 hpi IFN induction/production is refractory to the action of superinfecting ISP. UV target and thermal inactivation analyses revealed that ISP activity was dependent solely on the expression of the NS gene. Low doses of UV radiation enhanced by ∼10-fold the already high IFN-inducing capacity of a virus that expressed truncated NS1. There was no change in the number of IFP, implying that the production of IFN/cell had increased. We postulated that preventing degradation of cellular RNA pol II by viral polymerase prolonged the transcription of cellular mRNA, including IFN mRNA, to enhance the IFN-inducing capacity of the cell without any increase in the number of IFP. These studies point to the dueling roles of IFP and ISP in modulating IFN induction/production, the former activity being critical to the efficacy of live attenuated influenza vaccines.
October 2012
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126 Reads
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12 Citations
Nature Medicine
March 2012
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186 Reads
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22 Citations
Journal of Interferon & Cytokine Research
Naturally selected variants of influenza virus encoding truncated NS1 proteins were tested in chickens as candidate live-attenuated influenza vaccines. Their effectiveness correlated with the amount of interferon (IFN) induced in chicken cells. Effective variants induced large amounts of IFN and contained subpopulations with high ratios of defective-interfering particles:IFN-inducing particles (DIP:IFP). Ineffective variants induced less IFN and contained lower ratios of DIP:IFP. Unexpectedly, there was a reversal of phenotypes in mammalian cells. Variants that induced low amounts of IFN and had low DIP:IFP ratios in chicken cells were excellent IFN inducers with high DIP:IFP ratios in mammalian cells, and vice versa. The high DIP:IFP ratios and computer-simulated dynamics of infection suggested that DIP, as an individual particle, did not function as an IFP. The higher efficiency of IFPs in the presence of DIPs was attributed to reduced amounts of newly synthesized viral polymerase known to result from out-competition by defective-interfering RNAs, and the subsequent failure of that polymerase to turn-off cellular mRNA transcription-including IFN-mRNA.
January 2012
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6 Reads
January 2012
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2 Reads
... The model is on the basis of previous studies with VSV and RV grown in continuous culture in vitro. The production of particles is maintained so that the standard virus provides the necessary replication functions for DI particles which, in turn, interfere with the replication of standard virus and prevent them from completely destroying the cell culture (47). In animal infections, the result would be a subacute or latent form of the virus infection. ...
January 2018
... A similar inability of VSV to inhibit host cell protein synthesis was observed in human B lymphoblastoid cell lines (12). Although we do not yet know what accounts for the inability of VSV to shut off host cell protein synthesis in NK cells, it appears that the minimal requirements for VSV to shut off host protein synthesis are transcription of part of the viral genome producing leader RNA and N and NS mRNAs and subsequent production of at least minimally functional N and NS proteins (31). ...
January 2018
... For example, the NS1 protein in the influenza virus is able to shut down antiviral responses in host cells [90]. In fact, the NS1 protein of the influenza virus interferes with the induction or the production of IFNs which increases the pathogenicity of the influenza virus [91]. A previous study in chickens highlighted the role of the C-terminal domain of NS1 in the reduction of antiviral responses [92]. ...
May 2005
... However, DIPs are more likely to generate in viruses with segmented genomes. Influenza virus (IAV) is one such of the segmented viruses that have been extensively studied with respect to DIPs [2,16,66]. Due to the mutation-prone replicase and unique genome organization, populations of IAV exhibit vast amounts of diversity in terms of sequence and functional gene content [61,67]. Studies have shown that DIPs of IAV type A compete for polymerases with the standard virus [67,68]. ...
January 2009
... Recently, there has been growing interest in the therapeutic and immunogenic properties of DI particles [11][12][13][14][15][16][17]. They have also been suggested to contribute significantly to the safety and effectiveness of live attenuated influenza vaccines (LAIVs) by potentially reducing infectivity and enhancing innate immunity [11,[17][18][19][20]. ...
March 2015
... DI particles typically contain one or more ID vRNA, with a large internal deletion that can render them replication-incompetent. DI particles emerge de novo during virus growth in host cells contingent upon viral and host-related factors [2,26,67], and DI particle abundance can fluctuate during viral passages [6,[68][69][70]. However, the impact of IAV subculture and plaque purification on the ID vRNA abundance and diversity must be better understood. ...
December 2012
Journal of Interferon & Cytokine Research
... A similar method was developed for quantification of interferon induction-suppressing particles (55). More than 90% of the interferon-inducing or interferon induction-suppressing activity of IAV populations in chicken cells resided in RI particles (55,113). The interferon-inducing moiety of interferon-inducing particles is resistant to thermal and UV inactivation, indicating that the inducing moiety is preformed within the particle (possibly a critical threshold of genomic segments) and that transcription of the genomic segments is unnecessary for expression of interferon-inducing particle activity (55,113). ...
November 2012
Journal of Interferon & Cytokine Research
... In 1954, Dr. Theodore Puck wanted to study the genetics and metabolism of animal cells, however this was not possible at that time due to the lack of a simple, effective technique for large-scale colony production from single cells (2). He was searching for a way to achieve this feat, with the same high plating efficiency achieved with bacteria by microbiologists, to quantify the number of cells in a population capable of reproduction (3). At this time, Earle et al. had success with growing single mouse cells into colonies from within capillary tubes with conditioned nutrient media derived from mass cultures of growing cells; although, the plating efficiency for this complex process was only 4% (4). ...
May 2009
In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Animal
... Our prior work in these same macaques revealed that IFN-α2 protein concentration in the airways increased 2,000 times within just 2 days of lethal H5N1 infection, in association with virus titers of 10,000 PFU in airways [32]. This is not a function of lethal H5N1 influenza virus being resistant to IFN action [41] but rather we believe reflects the contribution of the IFN response to inflammation, which drives downstream effects that are detrimental to the lung. IFN responses also disrupt epithelial repair during the recovery phase of influenza in mouse models [11]. ...
October 2012
Nature Medicine
... It is now quite clear that very high multiplicities of VSV DI-5' particles, when completely free of standard wild-type VSV, do not kill cells (Marcus and Sekellick, 1974) and do not inhibit cellular RNA synthesis (Weck and Wagner, 1979a). By the same token, UV irradiation at moderate doses does not eliminate all biological activity of VSV, which can still retain the capacity to kill cells and to inhibit cellular nucleic acid (McGowan and Wagner, 1981) and protein synthesis (Marvaldi et al., 1978). This subject will be treated in greater detail in later sections of this chapter. ...
February 1978
Virology