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Quantitative regulation of the thermal stability of enveloped virus vaccines by surface charge engineering to prevent the self-aggregation of attachment glycoproteins

The development of thermostable vaccines can relieve the bottleneck of existing vaccines caused by thermal instability and subsequent poor efficacy, which is one of the predominant reasons for the millions of deaths caused by vaccine-preventable diseases. Research into the mechanism of viral thermos...

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Autores principales: Shang, Yu, Li, Li, Zhang, Tengfei, Luo, Qingping, Yu, Qingzhong, Zeng, Zhe, Li, Lintao, Jia, Miaomiao, Tang, Guoyi, Fan, Sanlin, Lu, Qin, Zhang, Wenting, Xue, Yuhan, Wang, Hongling, Liu, Wei, Wang, Hongcai, Zhang, Rongrong, Ding, Chan, Shao, Huabin, Wen, Guoyuan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9182686/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35679257
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010564
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author Shang, Yu
Li, Li
Zhang, Tengfei
Luo, Qingping
Yu, Qingzhong
Zeng, Zhe
Li, Lintao
Jia, Miaomiao
Tang, Guoyi
Fan, Sanlin
Lu, Qin
Zhang, Wenting
Xue, Yuhan
Wang, Hongling
Liu, Wei
Wang, Hongcai
Zhang, Rongrong
Ding, Chan
Shao, Huabin
Wen, Guoyuan
author_facet Shang, Yu
Li, Li
Zhang, Tengfei
Luo, Qingping
Yu, Qingzhong
Zeng, Zhe
Li, Lintao
Jia, Miaomiao
Tang, Guoyi
Fan, Sanlin
Lu, Qin
Zhang, Wenting
Xue, Yuhan
Wang, Hongling
Liu, Wei
Wang, Hongcai
Zhang, Rongrong
Ding, Chan
Shao, Huabin
Wen, Guoyuan
author_sort Shang, Yu
collection PubMed
description The development of thermostable vaccines can relieve the bottleneck of existing vaccines caused by thermal instability and subsequent poor efficacy, which is one of the predominant reasons for the millions of deaths caused by vaccine-preventable diseases. Research into the mechanism of viral thermostability may provide strategies for developing thermostable vaccines. Using Newcastle disease virus (NDV) as model, we identified the negative surface charge of attachment glycoprotein as a novel determinant of viral thermostability. It prevented the temperature-induced aggregation of glycoprotein and subsequent detachment from virion surface. Then structural stability of virion surface was improved and virus could bind to and infect cells efficiently after heat-treatment. Employing the approach of surface charge engineering, thermal stability of NDV and influenza A virus (IAV) vaccines was successfully improved. The increase in the level of vaccine thermal stability was determined by the value-added in the negative surface charge of the attachment glycoprotein. The engineered live and inactivated vaccines could be used efficiently after storage at 37°C for at least 10 and 60 days, respectively. Thus, our results revealed a novel surface-charge-mediated link between HN protein and NDV thermostability, which could be used to design thermal stable NDV and IAV vaccines rationally.
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spelling pubmed-91826862022-06-10 Quantitative regulation of the thermal stability of enveloped virus vaccines by surface charge engineering to prevent the self-aggregation of attachment glycoproteins Shang, Yu Li, Li Zhang, Tengfei Luo, Qingping Yu, Qingzhong Zeng, Zhe Li, Lintao Jia, Miaomiao Tang, Guoyi Fan, Sanlin Lu, Qin Zhang, Wenting Xue, Yuhan Wang, Hongling Liu, Wei Wang, Hongcai Zhang, Rongrong Ding, Chan Shao, Huabin Wen, Guoyuan PLoS Pathog Research Article The development of thermostable vaccines can relieve the bottleneck of existing vaccines caused by thermal instability and subsequent poor efficacy, which is one of the predominant reasons for the millions of deaths caused by vaccine-preventable diseases. Research into the mechanism of viral thermostability may provide strategies for developing thermostable vaccines. Using Newcastle disease virus (NDV) as model, we identified the negative surface charge of attachment glycoprotein as a novel determinant of viral thermostability. It prevented the temperature-induced aggregation of glycoprotein and subsequent detachment from virion surface. Then structural stability of virion surface was improved and virus could bind to and infect cells efficiently after heat-treatment. Employing the approach of surface charge engineering, thermal stability of NDV and influenza A virus (IAV) vaccines was successfully improved. The increase in the level of vaccine thermal stability was determined by the value-added in the negative surface charge of the attachment glycoprotein. The engineered live and inactivated vaccines could be used efficiently after storage at 37°C for at least 10 and 60 days, respectively. Thus, our results revealed a novel surface-charge-mediated link between HN protein and NDV thermostability, which could be used to design thermal stable NDV and IAV vaccines rationally. Public Library of Science 2022-06-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9182686/ /pubmed/35679257 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010564 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Shang, Yu
Li, Li
Zhang, Tengfei
Luo, Qingping
Yu, Qingzhong
Zeng, Zhe
Li, Lintao
Jia, Miaomiao
Tang, Guoyi
Fan, Sanlin
Lu, Qin
Zhang, Wenting
Xue, Yuhan
Wang, Hongling
Liu, Wei
Wang, Hongcai
Zhang, Rongrong
Ding, Chan
Shao, Huabin
Wen, Guoyuan
Quantitative regulation of the thermal stability of enveloped virus vaccines by surface charge engineering to prevent the self-aggregation of attachment glycoproteins
title Quantitative regulation of the thermal stability of enveloped virus vaccines by surface charge engineering to prevent the self-aggregation of attachment glycoproteins
title_full Quantitative regulation of the thermal stability of enveloped virus vaccines by surface charge engineering to prevent the self-aggregation of attachment glycoproteins
title_fullStr Quantitative regulation of the thermal stability of enveloped virus vaccines by surface charge engineering to prevent the self-aggregation of attachment glycoproteins
title_full_unstemmed Quantitative regulation of the thermal stability of enveloped virus vaccines by surface charge engineering to prevent the self-aggregation of attachment glycoproteins
title_short Quantitative regulation of the thermal stability of enveloped virus vaccines by surface charge engineering to prevent the self-aggregation of attachment glycoproteins
title_sort quantitative regulation of the thermal stability of enveloped virus vaccines by surface charge engineering to prevent the self-aggregation of attachment glycoproteins
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9182686/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35679257
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010564
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