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Effect of the ati Gene Deletion on the Pathogenicity and Immunogenicity of the Vaccinia Virus

Among the nonvirion proteins of the vaccinia virus (VACV), a 94-kDa long protein is most abundantly present; the protein is a truncated form of the 150-kDa A-type inclusion (ATI) protein of the cowpox virus encoded by the ati gene. This VACV protein does not form intracellular ATIs, being as it is a...

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Autores principales: Yakubitskiy, S. N., Sergeev, A. A., Titova, K. A., Shulgina, I. S., Starostina, E. V., Borgoyakova, M. B., Karpenko, L. I., Shchelkunov, S. N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: A.I. Gordeyev 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10615193/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37908769
http://dx.doi.org/10.32607/actanaturae.17872
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author Yakubitskiy, S. N.
Sergeev, A. A.
Titova, K. A.
Shulgina, I. S.
Starostina, E. V.
Borgoyakova, M. B.
Karpenko, L. I.
Shchelkunov, S. N.
author_facet Yakubitskiy, S. N.
Sergeev, A. A.
Titova, K. A.
Shulgina, I. S.
Starostina, E. V.
Borgoyakova, M. B.
Karpenko, L. I.
Shchelkunov, S. N.
author_sort Yakubitskiy, S. N.
collection PubMed
description Among the nonvirion proteins of the vaccinia virus (VACV), a 94-kDa long protein is most abundantly present; the protein is a truncated form of the 150-kDa A-type inclusion (ATI) protein of the cowpox virus encoded by the ati gene. This VACV protein does not form intracellular ATIs, being as it is a major immunogen upon infection/immunization of humans or animals with the VACV. Antibodies specific to this protein are not virus-neutralizing. The present study focused on the effect of the production of this nonstructural major immunogenic VACV protein on the manifestation of pathogenicity and immunogenicity of the virus in the BALB/c mouse model of infection. In order to introduce a targeted deletion into the VACV LIVP genome, the recombinant integration/deletion plasmid pΔati was constructed and further used to generate the recombinant virus LIVPΔati. The pathogenicity of the VACV LIVP and LIVPΔati strains was studied in 3-week-old mice. The mice were intranasally infected with the viruses at a dose of 107 pfu; 50% of the animals infected with the parent LIVP strain died, while infection with the LIVPΔati strain led to the death of only 20% of the mice. Intradermal vaccination of mice aged 6– weeks with the LIVPΔati virus statistically significantly increased the production of VACV-specific IgG, compared to that after intradermal vaccination with VACV LIVP. Meanwhile, no differences were noted in the cell-mediated immune response to the vaccination of mice with VACV LIVP or LIVPΔati, which was assessed by ELISpot according to the number of splenocytes producing IFN-γ in response to stimulation with virus-specific peptides. Intranasal infection of mice with lethal doses of the cowpox virus or the ectromelia virus on day 60 post-immunization with the studied VACV variants demonstrated that the mutant LIVPΔati elicits a stronger protective response compared to the parent LIVP.
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spelling pubmed-106151932023-10-31 Effect of the ati Gene Deletion on the Pathogenicity and Immunogenicity of the Vaccinia Virus Yakubitskiy, S. N. Sergeev, A. A. Titova, K. A. Shulgina, I. S. Starostina, E. V. Borgoyakova, M. B. Karpenko, L. I. Shchelkunov, S. N. Acta Naturae Research Article Among the nonvirion proteins of the vaccinia virus (VACV), a 94-kDa long protein is most abundantly present; the protein is a truncated form of the 150-kDa A-type inclusion (ATI) protein of the cowpox virus encoded by the ati gene. This VACV protein does not form intracellular ATIs, being as it is a major immunogen upon infection/immunization of humans or animals with the VACV. Antibodies specific to this protein are not virus-neutralizing. The present study focused on the effect of the production of this nonstructural major immunogenic VACV protein on the manifestation of pathogenicity and immunogenicity of the virus in the BALB/c mouse model of infection. In order to introduce a targeted deletion into the VACV LIVP genome, the recombinant integration/deletion plasmid pΔati was constructed and further used to generate the recombinant virus LIVPΔati. The pathogenicity of the VACV LIVP and LIVPΔati strains was studied in 3-week-old mice. The mice were intranasally infected with the viruses at a dose of 107 pfu; 50% of the animals infected with the parent LIVP strain died, while infection with the LIVPΔati strain led to the death of only 20% of the mice. Intradermal vaccination of mice aged 6– weeks with the LIVPΔati virus statistically significantly increased the production of VACV-specific IgG, compared to that after intradermal vaccination with VACV LIVP. Meanwhile, no differences were noted in the cell-mediated immune response to the vaccination of mice with VACV LIVP or LIVPΔati, which was assessed by ELISpot according to the number of splenocytes producing IFN-γ in response to stimulation with virus-specific peptides. Intranasal infection of mice with lethal doses of the cowpox virus or the ectromelia virus on day 60 post-immunization with the studied VACV variants demonstrated that the mutant LIVPΔati elicits a stronger protective response compared to the parent LIVP. A.I. Gordeyev 2023 /pmc/articles/PMC10615193/ /pubmed/37908769 http://dx.doi.org/10.32607/actanaturae.17872 Text en Copyright ® 2023 National Research University Higher School of Economics. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Yakubitskiy, S. N.
Sergeev, A. A.
Titova, K. A.
Shulgina, I. S.
Starostina, E. V.
Borgoyakova, M. B.
Karpenko, L. I.
Shchelkunov, S. N.
Effect of the ati Gene Deletion on the Pathogenicity and Immunogenicity of the Vaccinia Virus
title Effect of the ati Gene Deletion on the Pathogenicity and Immunogenicity of the Vaccinia Virus
title_full Effect of the ati Gene Deletion on the Pathogenicity and Immunogenicity of the Vaccinia Virus
title_fullStr Effect of the ati Gene Deletion on the Pathogenicity and Immunogenicity of the Vaccinia Virus
title_full_unstemmed Effect of the ati Gene Deletion on the Pathogenicity and Immunogenicity of the Vaccinia Virus
title_short Effect of the ati Gene Deletion on the Pathogenicity and Immunogenicity of the Vaccinia Virus
title_sort effect of the ati gene deletion on the pathogenicity and immunogenicity of the vaccinia virus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10615193/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37908769
http://dx.doi.org/10.32607/actanaturae.17872
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