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Attenuation of Vaccinia Virus

Since 1980, in the post-smallpox vaccination era the human population has become increasingly susceptible compared to a generation ago to not only the variola (smallpox) virus, but also other zoonotic orthopoxviruses. The need for safer vaccines against orthopoxviruses is even greater now. The Liste...

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Autores principales: Yakubitskiy, S. N., Kolosova, I. V., Maksyutov, R. A., Shchelkunov, S. N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: A.I. Gordeyev 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4717256/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26798498
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author Yakubitskiy, S. N.
Kolosova, I. V.
Maksyutov, R. A.
Shchelkunov, S. N.
author_facet Yakubitskiy, S. N.
Kolosova, I. V.
Maksyutov, R. A.
Shchelkunov, S. N.
author_sort Yakubitskiy, S. N.
collection PubMed
description Since 1980, in the post-smallpox vaccination era the human population has become increasingly susceptible compared to a generation ago to not only the variola (smallpox) virus, but also other zoonotic orthopoxviruses. The need for safer vaccines against orthopoxviruses is even greater now. The Lister vaccine strain (LIVP) of vaccinia virus was used as a parental virus for generating a recombinant 1421ABJCN clone defective in five virulence genes encoding hemagglutinin (A56R), the IFN-γ-binding protein (B8R), thymidine kinase (J2R), the complement-binding protein (C3L), and the Bcl-2-like inhibitor of apoptosis (N1L). We found that disruption of these loci does not affect replication in mammalian cell cultures. The isogenic recombinant strain 1421ABJCN exhibits a reduced inflammatory response and attenuated neurovirulence relative to LIVP. Virus titers of 1421ABJCN were 3 lg lower versus the parent VACV LIVP when administered by the intracerebral route in new-born mice. In a subcutaneous mouse model, 1421ABJCN displayed levels of VACV-neutralizing antibodies comparable to those of LIVP and conferred protective immunity against lethal challenge by the ectromelia virus. The VACV mutant holds promise as a safe live vaccine strain for preventing smallpox and other orthopoxvirus infections.
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spelling pubmed-47172562016-01-21 Attenuation of Vaccinia Virus Yakubitskiy, S. N. Kolosova, I. V. Maksyutov, R. A. Shchelkunov, S. N. Acta Naturae Research Article Since 1980, in the post-smallpox vaccination era the human population has become increasingly susceptible compared to a generation ago to not only the variola (smallpox) virus, but also other zoonotic orthopoxviruses. The need for safer vaccines against orthopoxviruses is even greater now. The Lister vaccine strain (LIVP) of vaccinia virus was used as a parental virus for generating a recombinant 1421ABJCN clone defective in five virulence genes encoding hemagglutinin (A56R), the IFN-γ-binding protein (B8R), thymidine kinase (J2R), the complement-binding protein (C3L), and the Bcl-2-like inhibitor of apoptosis (N1L). We found that disruption of these loci does not affect replication in mammalian cell cultures. The isogenic recombinant strain 1421ABJCN exhibits a reduced inflammatory response and attenuated neurovirulence relative to LIVP. Virus titers of 1421ABJCN were 3 lg lower versus the parent VACV LIVP when administered by the intracerebral route in new-born mice. In a subcutaneous mouse model, 1421ABJCN displayed levels of VACV-neutralizing antibodies comparable to those of LIVP and conferred protective immunity against lethal challenge by the ectromelia virus. The VACV mutant holds promise as a safe live vaccine strain for preventing smallpox and other orthopoxvirus infections. A.I. Gordeyev 2015 /pmc/articles/PMC4717256/ /pubmed/26798498 Text en Copyright ® 2015 Park-media Ltd. http://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.
Kolosova, I. V.
Maksyutov, R. A.
Shchelkunov, S. N.
Attenuation of Vaccinia Virus
title Attenuation of Vaccinia Virus
title_full Attenuation of Vaccinia Virus
title_fullStr Attenuation of Vaccinia Virus
title_full_unstemmed Attenuation of Vaccinia Virus
title_short Attenuation of Vaccinia Virus
title_sort attenuation of vaccinia virus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4717256/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26798498
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