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Epitope Dampening Monotypic Measles Virus Hemagglutinin Glycoprotein Results in Resistance to Cocktail of Monoclonal Antibodies

The measles virus (MV) is serologically monotypic. Life-long immunity is conferred by a single attack of measles or following vaccination with the MV vaccine. This is contrary to viruses such as influenza, which readily develop resistance to the immune system and recur. A better understanding of fac...

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Autores principales: Lech, Patrycja J., Tobin, Gregory J., Bushnell, Ruth, Gutschenritter, Emily, Pham, Linh D., Nace, Rebecca, Verhoeyen, Els, Cosset, François-Loïc, Muller, Claude P., Russell, Stephen J., Nara, Peter L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3536790/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23300970
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052306
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author Lech, Patrycja J.
Tobin, Gregory J.
Bushnell, Ruth
Gutschenritter, Emily
Pham, Linh D.
Nace, Rebecca
Verhoeyen, Els
Cosset, François-Loïc
Muller, Claude P.
Russell, Stephen J.
Nara, Peter L.
author_facet Lech, Patrycja J.
Tobin, Gregory J.
Bushnell, Ruth
Gutschenritter, Emily
Pham, Linh D.
Nace, Rebecca
Verhoeyen, Els
Cosset, François-Loïc
Muller, Claude P.
Russell, Stephen J.
Nara, Peter L.
author_sort Lech, Patrycja J.
collection PubMed
description The measles virus (MV) is serologically monotypic. Life-long immunity is conferred by a single attack of measles or following vaccination with the MV vaccine. This is contrary to viruses such as influenza, which readily develop resistance to the immune system and recur. A better understanding of factors that restrain MV to one serotype may allow us to predict if MV will remain monotypic in the future and influence the design of novel MV vaccines and therapeutics. MV hemagglutinin (H) glycoprotein, binds to cellular receptors and subsequently triggers the fusion (F) glycoprotein to fuse the virus into the cell. H is also the major target for neutralizing antibodies. To explore if MV remains monotypic due to a lack of plasticity of the H glycoprotein, we used the technology of Immune Dampening to generate viruses with rationally designed N-linked glycosylation sites and mutations in different epitopes and screened for viruses that escaped monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). We then combined rationally designed mutations with naturally selected mutations to generate a virus resistant to a cocktail of neutralizing mAbs targeting four different epitopes simultaneously. Two epitopes were protected by engineered N-linked glycosylations and two epitopes acquired escape mutations via two consecutive rounds of artificial selection in the presence of mAbs. Three of these epitopes were targeted by mAbs known to interfere with receptor binding. Results demonstrate that, within the epitopes analyzed, H can tolerate mutations in different residues and additional N-linked glycosylations to escape mAbs. Understanding the degree of change that H can tolerate is important as we follow its evolution in a host whose immunity is vaccine induced by genotype A strains instead of multiple genetically distinct wild-type MVs.
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spelling pubmed-35367902013-01-08 Epitope Dampening Monotypic Measles Virus Hemagglutinin Glycoprotein Results in Resistance to Cocktail of Monoclonal Antibodies Lech, Patrycja J. Tobin, Gregory J. Bushnell, Ruth Gutschenritter, Emily Pham, Linh D. Nace, Rebecca Verhoeyen, Els Cosset, François-Loïc Muller, Claude P. Russell, Stephen J. Nara, Peter L. PLoS One Research Article The measles virus (MV) is serologically monotypic. Life-long immunity is conferred by a single attack of measles or following vaccination with the MV vaccine. This is contrary to viruses such as influenza, which readily develop resistance to the immune system and recur. A better understanding of factors that restrain MV to one serotype may allow us to predict if MV will remain monotypic in the future and influence the design of novel MV vaccines and therapeutics. MV hemagglutinin (H) glycoprotein, binds to cellular receptors and subsequently triggers the fusion (F) glycoprotein to fuse the virus into the cell. H is also the major target for neutralizing antibodies. To explore if MV remains monotypic due to a lack of plasticity of the H glycoprotein, we used the technology of Immune Dampening to generate viruses with rationally designed N-linked glycosylation sites and mutations in different epitopes and screened for viruses that escaped monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). We then combined rationally designed mutations with naturally selected mutations to generate a virus resistant to a cocktail of neutralizing mAbs targeting four different epitopes simultaneously. Two epitopes were protected by engineered N-linked glycosylations and two epitopes acquired escape mutations via two consecutive rounds of artificial selection in the presence of mAbs. Three of these epitopes were targeted by mAbs known to interfere with receptor binding. Results demonstrate that, within the epitopes analyzed, H can tolerate mutations in different residues and additional N-linked glycosylations to escape mAbs. Understanding the degree of change that H can tolerate is important as we follow its evolution in a host whose immunity is vaccine induced by genotype A strains instead of multiple genetically distinct wild-type MVs. Public Library of Science 2013-01-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3536790/ /pubmed/23300970 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052306 Text en © 2013 Lech 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
Lech, Patrycja J.
Tobin, Gregory J.
Bushnell, Ruth
Gutschenritter, Emily
Pham, Linh D.
Nace, Rebecca
Verhoeyen, Els
Cosset, François-Loïc
Muller, Claude P.
Russell, Stephen J.
Nara, Peter L.
Epitope Dampening Monotypic Measles Virus Hemagglutinin Glycoprotein Results in Resistance to Cocktail of Monoclonal Antibodies
title Epitope Dampening Monotypic Measles Virus Hemagglutinin Glycoprotein Results in Resistance to Cocktail of Monoclonal Antibodies
title_full Epitope Dampening Monotypic Measles Virus Hemagglutinin Glycoprotein Results in Resistance to Cocktail of Monoclonal Antibodies
title_fullStr Epitope Dampening Monotypic Measles Virus Hemagglutinin Glycoprotein Results in Resistance to Cocktail of Monoclonal Antibodies
title_full_unstemmed Epitope Dampening Monotypic Measles Virus Hemagglutinin Glycoprotein Results in Resistance to Cocktail of Monoclonal Antibodies
title_short Epitope Dampening Monotypic Measles Virus Hemagglutinin Glycoprotein Results in Resistance to Cocktail of Monoclonal Antibodies
title_sort epitope dampening monotypic measles virus hemagglutinin glycoprotein results in resistance to cocktail of monoclonal antibodies
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3536790/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23300970
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052306
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