chimeric virus
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Viruses ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 2335
Author(s):  
Lixiang Xie ◽  
Guanlong Xu ◽  
Lingxiang Xin ◽  
Zhaofei Wang ◽  
Rujuan Wu ◽  
...  

Reassortant variant viruses generated between 2009 H1N1 pandemic influenza virus [A(H1N1)pdm09] and endemic swine influenza viruses posed a potential risk to humans. Surprisingly, genetic analysis showed that almost all of these variant viruses contained the M segment from A(H1N1)pdm09, which originated from Eurasian avian-like swine influenza viruses. Studies have shown that the A(H1N1)pdm09 M gene is critical for the transmissibility and pathogenicity of the variant viruses. However, the M gene encodes two proteins, M1 and M2, and which of those plays a more important role in virus pathogenicity remains unknown. In this study, the M1 and M2 genes of A(H1N1)pdm09 were replaced with those of endemic H3N2 swine influenza virus, respectively. The chimeric viruses were rescued and evaluated in vitro and in mice. Both M1 and M2 of H3N2 affected the virus replication in vitro. In mice, the introduction of H3N2 M1 attenuated the chimeric virus, where all the mice survived from the infection, compared with the wild type virus that caused 100 % mortality. However, the chimeric virus containing H3N2 M2 was still virulent to mice, and caused 16.6% mortality, as well as similar body weight loss to the wild type virus infected group. Compared with the wild type virus, the chimeric virus containing H3N2 M1 induced lower levels of inflammatory cytokines and higher levels of anti-inflammatory cytokines, whereas the chimeric virus containing H3N2 M2 induced substantial pro-inflammatory responses, but higher levels of anti-inflammatory cytokines. The study demonstrated that Eurasian avian-like M1 played a more important role than M2 in the pathogenicity of A(H1N1)pdm09 in mice.


Intervirology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tianyu Lu ◽  
Nouredine Behloul ◽  
Yi Zhou ◽  
Sarra Baha ◽  
Zhenzhen Liu ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard J. Roller ◽  
Tineke Hassman ◽  
Alison Haugo-Crooks

HSV and VZV are both members of the alphaherpesvirus subfamily, but are of different genera. Substitution of the HSV-1 UL34 coding sequence with that of its VZV homolog, ORF24, results in a virus that has defects in viral growth, spread, capsid egress, and nuclear lamina disruption very similar to those seen in a UL34-null virus despite normal interaction between ORF24 protein and HSV pUL31 and proper localization of the nuclear egress complex at the nuclear envelope. Minimal selection for growth in cell culture resulted in viruses that grew and spread much more efficiently that the parental chimeric virus. These viruses varied in their ability to support nuclear lamina disruption, normal nuclear egress complex localization and capsid de-envelopment. Single mutations that suppress the growth defect were mapped to the coding sequences of ORF24, ICP22 and ICP4 and one virus carried single mutations in each of the ICP22 and US3 coding sequences. The phenotypes of these viruses support a role for ICP22 in nuclear lamina disruption and a completely unexpected role for the major transcriptional regulator, ICP4, in capsid nuclear egress. Importance Interactions among virus proteins are critical for assembly and egress of virus particles, and such interactions are attractive targets for antiviral therapy. Identification of critical functional interactions can be slow and tedious. Capsid nuclear egress of herpesviruses is a critical event in the assembly and egress pathway and is mediated by two proteins that are conserved among herpesviruses, pUL31 and pUL34. Here we describe a cell culture evolution approach to identify other viral gene products that functionally interact with pUL34.


2021 ◽  
Vol 102 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jermilia Charles ◽  
Chandra S. Tangudu ◽  
Daniel Nunez-Avellaneda ◽  
Aaron C. Brault ◽  
Bradley J. Blitvich

Most flaviviruses are transmitted horizontally between vertebrate hosts by haematophagous arthropods. Others exhibit host ranges restricted to vertebrates or arthropods. Vertebrate-specific flaviviruses are commonly referred to as no-known-vector (NKV) flaviviruses and can be separated into bat- and rodent-associated NKV flaviviruses. Rio Bravo virus (RBV) is one of eight recognized bat-associated NKV (B-NKV) flaviviruses. Studies designed to identify the genetic determinants that condition the host range restriction of B-NKV flaviviruses have never been performed. To investigate whether the host range restriction occurs at the level of attachment or entry, chimeric flaviviruses were created by inserting the pre-membrane and envelope protein genes of RBV into the genetic backbones of yellow fever virus (YFV) and Zika virus (ZIKV), two mosquito-borne flaviviruses associated with human disease. The chimeric viruses infected both vertebrate and mosquito cells. In vertebrate cells, all viruses produced similar mean peak titres, but the chimeric viruses grew more slowly than their parental viruses during early infection. In mosquito cells, the chimeric virus of YFV and RBV grew more slowly than YFV at early post-inoculation time points, but reached a similar mean peak titre. In contrast, the chimeric virus of ZIKV and RBV produced a mean peak titre that was approximately 10-fold lower than ZIKV. The chimeric virus of YFV and RBV produced an intermediate plaque phenotype, while the chimeric virus of ZIKV and RBV produced smaller plaques than both parental viruses. To conclude, we provide evidence that the structural glycoproteins of RBV permit entry into both mosquito and vertebrate cells, indicating that the host range restriction of B-NKV flaviviruses is mediated by a post-attachment/entry event.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard John Roller ◽  
Tineke Hassman ◽  
Alison Haugo-Crooks

HSV and VZV are both members of the alphaherpesvirus subfamily, but are of different genera.  Substitution of the HSV-1 UL34 coding sequence with that of its VZV homolog, ORF24, results in a virus that has defects in viral growth, spread, capsid egress, and nuclear lamina disruption very similar to those seen in a UL34-null virus despite normal interaction between ORF24 protein and HSV pUL31 and proper localization of the NEC at the nuclear envelope. Minimal selection for growth in cell culture resulted in viruses that grew and spread much more efficiently that the parental chimeric virus.  These viruses varied in their ability to support nuclear lamina disruption, normal NEC localization and capsid de-envelopment.  Single mutations that suppress the growth defect were mapped to the coding sequences of ORF24, ICP22 and ICP4 and one virus carried single mutations in each of the ICP22 and US3 coding sequences.  The phenotypes of these viruses support a role for ICP22 in nuclear lamina disruption and a completely unexpected role for the major transcriptional regulator, ICP4, in capsid nuclear egress.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter T. Habib

AbstractThe term chimeric virus was not popular in the last decades. Recently, according to current sequencing efforts in discovering COVID-19 Secrets, the generated information assumed the presence of 6 Coronavirus main strains, but coronavirus diverges into hundreds of sub-strains. the bottleneck is the mutation rate. With two mutation/month, humanity will meet a new sub-strain every month. Tracking new sequenced viruses is urgently needed because of the pathogenic effect of the new substrains. here we introduce COVATOR, A user-friendly and python-based software that identifies viral chimerism. COVATOR aligns input genome and protein that has no known source, against genomes and protein with known source, then gives the user a graphical summary.


Vaccine ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (49) ◽  
pp. 7774-7779
Author(s):  
Satoko Watanabe ◽  
Zui Fujimoto ◽  
Masaji Mase

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