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Conservation and Variability of West Nile Virus Proteins

West Nile virus (WNV) has emerged globally as an increasingly important pathogen for humans and domestic animals. Studies of the evolutionary diversity of the virus over its known history will help to elucidate conserved sites, and characterize their correspondence to other pathogens and their relev...

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Autores principales: Koo, Qi Ying, Khan, Asif M., Jung, Keun-Ok, Ramdas, Shweta, Miotto, Olivo, Tan, Tin Wee, Brusic, Vladimir, Salmon, Jerome, August, J. Thomas
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2670515/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19401763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0005352
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author Koo, Qi Ying
Khan, Asif M.
Jung, Keun-Ok
Ramdas, Shweta
Miotto, Olivo
Tan, Tin Wee
Brusic, Vladimir
Salmon, Jerome
August, J. Thomas
author_facet Koo, Qi Ying
Khan, Asif M.
Jung, Keun-Ok
Ramdas, Shweta
Miotto, Olivo
Tan, Tin Wee
Brusic, Vladimir
Salmon, Jerome
August, J. Thomas
author_sort Koo, Qi Ying
collection PubMed
description West Nile virus (WNV) has emerged globally as an increasingly important pathogen for humans and domestic animals. Studies of the evolutionary diversity of the virus over its known history will help to elucidate conserved sites, and characterize their correspondence to other pathogens and their relevance to the immune system. We describe a large-scale analysis of the entire WNV proteome, aimed at identifying and characterizing evolutionarily conserved amino acid sequences. This study, which used 2,746 WNV protein sequences collected from the NCBI GenPept database, focused on analysis of peptides of length 9 amino acids or more, which are immunologically relevant as potential T-cell epitopes. Entropy-based analysis of the diversity of WNV sequences, revealed the presence of numerous evolutionarily stable nonamer positions across the proteome (entropy value of ≤1). The representation (frequency) of nonamers variant to the predominant peptide at these stable positions was, generally, low (≤10% of the WNV sequences analyzed). Eighty-eight fragments of length 9–29 amino acids, representing ∼34% of the WNV polyprotein length, were identified to be identical and evolutionarily stable in all analyzed WNV sequences. Of the 88 completely conserved sequences, 67 are also present in other flaviviruses, and several have been associated with the functional and structural properties of viral proteins. Immunoinformatic analysis revealed that the majority (78/88) of conserved sequences are potentially immunogenic, while 44 contained experimentally confirmed human T-cell epitopes. This study identified a comprehensive catalogue of completely conserved WNV sequences, many of which are shared by other flaviviruses, and majority are potential epitopes. The complete conservation of these immunologically relevant sequences through the entire recorded WNV history suggests they will be valuable as components of peptide-specific vaccines or other therapeutic applications, for sequence-specific diagnosis of a wide-range of Flavivivirus infections, and for studies of homologous sequences among other flaviviruses.
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spelling pubmed-26705152009-04-29 Conservation and Variability of West Nile Virus Proteins Koo, Qi Ying Khan, Asif M. Jung, Keun-Ok Ramdas, Shweta Miotto, Olivo Tan, Tin Wee Brusic, Vladimir Salmon, Jerome August, J. Thomas PLoS One Research Article West Nile virus (WNV) has emerged globally as an increasingly important pathogen for humans and domestic animals. Studies of the evolutionary diversity of the virus over its known history will help to elucidate conserved sites, and characterize their correspondence to other pathogens and their relevance to the immune system. We describe a large-scale analysis of the entire WNV proteome, aimed at identifying and characterizing evolutionarily conserved amino acid sequences. This study, which used 2,746 WNV protein sequences collected from the NCBI GenPept database, focused on analysis of peptides of length 9 amino acids or more, which are immunologically relevant as potential T-cell epitopes. Entropy-based analysis of the diversity of WNV sequences, revealed the presence of numerous evolutionarily stable nonamer positions across the proteome (entropy value of ≤1). The representation (frequency) of nonamers variant to the predominant peptide at these stable positions was, generally, low (≤10% of the WNV sequences analyzed). Eighty-eight fragments of length 9–29 amino acids, representing ∼34% of the WNV polyprotein length, were identified to be identical and evolutionarily stable in all analyzed WNV sequences. Of the 88 completely conserved sequences, 67 are also present in other flaviviruses, and several have been associated with the functional and structural properties of viral proteins. Immunoinformatic analysis revealed that the majority (78/88) of conserved sequences are potentially immunogenic, while 44 contained experimentally confirmed human T-cell epitopes. This study identified a comprehensive catalogue of completely conserved WNV sequences, many of which are shared by other flaviviruses, and majority are potential epitopes. The complete conservation of these immunologically relevant sequences through the entire recorded WNV history suggests they will be valuable as components of peptide-specific vaccines or other therapeutic applications, for sequence-specific diagnosis of a wide-range of Flavivivirus infections, and for studies of homologous sequences among other flaviviruses. Public Library of Science 2009-04-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2670515/ /pubmed/19401763 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0005352 Text en Koo et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ 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 author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Koo, Qi Ying
Khan, Asif M.
Jung, Keun-Ok
Ramdas, Shweta
Miotto, Olivo
Tan, Tin Wee
Brusic, Vladimir
Salmon, Jerome
August, J. Thomas
Conservation and Variability of West Nile Virus Proteins
title Conservation and Variability of West Nile Virus Proteins
title_full Conservation and Variability of West Nile Virus Proteins
title_fullStr Conservation and Variability of West Nile Virus Proteins
title_full_unstemmed Conservation and Variability of West Nile Virus Proteins
title_short Conservation and Variability of West Nile Virus Proteins
title_sort conservation and variability of west nile virus proteins
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2670515/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19401763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0005352
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