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1.
Vaccines prepared from chimeras of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) induce neutralizing antibodies and protective immunity to multiple serotypes of FMDV. 总被引:1,自引:4,他引:1 下载免费PDF全文
The G-H loop of VP1 (residues 132 to 159) of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) is a prominent feature on the virion surface and has an important role in vaccine efficacy, generation of antigenic variants, and cell binding. Using an infectious cDNA of FMDV, we have constructed serotype A viruses in which the G-H loop has been substituted with the homologous sequences from serotype O or C. These chimeric viruses replicated to high titer and displayed plaque morphologies similar to those of wild-type viruses, demonstrating that the functions provided by the loop can be readily exchanged between serotypes. Monoclonal antibody analyses showed that epitopes contained within the loop were transferred to the chimeras and that epitopes encoded by the type A backbone were maintained. Chemically inactivated vaccines prepared from chimeric viruses induced antibodies in guinea pigs that neutralized both type A and either type O or type C viruses. Swine inoculated with the A/C chimera vaccine also produced cross-reactive antibodies, were protected from challenge with the type A virus, and partially protected against challenge with type C. These studies emphasize the importance of epitopes outside of the G-H loop in protective immunity in swine, which is a natural host of FMDV. 相似文献
2.
Identification of an exposed region of the immunogenic capsid polypeptide VP1 on foot-and-mouth disease virus 总被引:5,自引:3,他引:5 下载免费PDF全文
Iodination of intact foot-and-mouth disease virus results in the selective labeling of VP1, substantiating its exposed location on the virion. A comparison of tryptic peptides revealed that a single tyrosine-containing peptide was labeled with iodine on intact or protease-cleaved virus. The labeled peptide from intact and protease-cleaved virus was characterized by molecular weight sizing and sequence analysis. Carboxypeptidase digestion of intact VP1, limited trypsin-cleaved VP1, and VP1 purified from bacterially contaminated tissue cultures yielded carboxyterminal residues of leucine, valine-arginine, and serine-alanine, respectively. The correlation of these findings with previous data on the amino acid sequence derived from nucleotide sequencing of serotypes A12 and O1 of foot-and-mouth disease virus VP1 places the probable exposed antigenic region of VP1 in a serotype-variable region including residues 136 through 144. 相似文献
3.
Immune and antibody responses to an isolated capsid protein of foot-and-mouth disease virus. 总被引:27,自引:0,他引:27
H L Bachrach D M Moore P D McKercher J Polatnick 《Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)》1975,115(6):1636-1641
The purified capsid proteins VP1, VP2, and VP3 of foot-and-mouth disease virus type A12 strain 119 emulsified with incomplete Freund's adjuvant were studied in swine and guinea pigs. Swine inoculated on days 0, 28, and 60 with 100-mug doses of VP3 were protected by day 82 against exposure to infected swine. Serums from animals inoculated with VP3 contained viral precipitating and neutralizing antibodies, but such serums recognized fewer viral antigenic determinants than did antiviral serums. Capsid proteins VP1 and VP2 did not produce detectable antiviral antibody in guinea pigs, and antiviral antibody responses in swine to a mixture of VP1, VP2, and VP3 were lower than the responses to VP3 alone. However, when swine were inoculated with VP1, VP2, and VP3 separately at different body sites, no interference with the response to VP3 was observed. Vaccine containing VP3 isolated from acetylethylenimine-treated virus appeared less protective for swine than vaccine containing VP3 from nontreated virus. Trypsinized virus, which contains the cleaved peptides VP3a and VP3b rather than intact VP3, produced approximately the same levels of antiviral antibody responses in guinea pigs as did virus. Conversely, an isolated mixture of VP3a and VP3b did not produce detectable antiviral antibody responses in guinea pigs. The VP3a-VP3b mixture did, however, sensitize guinea pigs to elicit such responses following reinoculation with a marginally effective dose of trypsinized virus. 相似文献
4.
Chimeric polioviruses that include sequences derived from two independent antigenic sites of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) induce neutralizing antibodies against FMDV in guinea pigs. 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2 下载免费PDF全文
Five poliovirus recombinants containing sequences corresponding to foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) antigenic sites were constructed. Viable virus was recovered from four of these plasmids, in which the VP1 beta B-beta C loop (antigenic site 1) of poliovirus type 1 Sabin had been replaced with sequences derived from the VP1 beta G-beta H loop (antigenic site 1) of FMDV O1 Kaufbeuren (O1K), chimera O1.1 (residues 141 to 154), chimera O1.2 (residues 147 to 156), and chimera O1.3 (residues 140 to 160) or from the beta B-beta C loop of VP1 (antigenic site 3) in chimera O3.1 (residues 40 to 49). One chimera (O1.3) was neutralized by FMDV-specific polyclonal serum and monoclonal antibodies directed against antigenic site 1 of FMDV. Chimeras O1.3 and O3.1 induced site-specific FMDV-neutralizing antibodies in guinea pigs. Chimera O1.3 was capable of inducing a protective response against FMDV challenge in some guinea pigs. 相似文献
5.
A single amino acid substitution in the capsid of foot-and-mouth disease virus can increase acid resistance 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Martín-Acebes MA Vázquez-Calvo A Rincón V Mateu MG Sobrino F 《Journal of virology》2011,85(6):2733-2740
Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) particles lose infectivity due to their disassembly at pH values slightly below neutrality. This acid-dependent disassembly process is required for viral RNA release inside endosomes. To study the molecular determinants of viral resistance to acid-induced disassembly, six FMDV variants with increased resistance to acid inactivation were isolated. Infection by these mutants was more sensitive to drugs that raise the endosomal pH (NH(4)Cl and concanamycin A) than was infection by the parental C-S8c1 virus, confirming that the increase in acid resistance is related to a lower pH requirement for productive uncoating. Amino acid replacement N17D at the N terminus of VP1 capsid protein was found in all six mutants. This single substitution was shown to be responsible for increased acid resistance when introduced into an infectious FMDV clone. The increased resistance of this mutant against acid-induced inactivation was shown to be due to its increased resistance against capsid dissociation into pentameric subunits. Interestingly, the N17D mutation was located close to but not at the interpentamer interfaces. The mutants described here extend the panel of FMDV variants exhibiting different pH sensitivities and illustrate the adaptive flexibility of viral quasispecies to pH variations. 相似文献
6.
Antigenic stability of foot-and-mouth disease virus variants on serial passage in cell culture. 总被引:5,自引:3,他引:2 下载免费PDF全文
Two neutralizing monoclonal antibody (MAb)-resistant variants selected from an isolate of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) type A5 were repeatedly passaged in cell culture and monitored for susceptibility to neutralization by the selecting MAb. A variant isolated with a MAb to a conformational epitope (1-OG2) lost resistance in 20 passages, while a variant isolated with a MAb to a linear epitope (1-HA6) persisted for 30 passages. In both cases, the virus population emerging after passage was antigenically and genetically indistinguishable from the original wild-type parental virus (FMDV A5 Spain-86). Coinfection assays with the wild type and each variant, and between the variants, showed rapid conversion to a homogeneous population. Wild-type virus prevailed over the variants and for coinfection between the variants, the linear epitope variant 1-HA6. While both variants arose from a single nucleotide substitution and reversion to wild type occurred for each, it appears that the variant based on the continuous epitope (1-HA6) was more stable. We discuss the implications of these results for the antigenic diversity of FMDV and its relationship to virus evolution. 相似文献
7.
Yang NS Wang JH Lin KF Wang CY Kim SA Yang YL Jong MH Kuo TY Lai SS Cheng RH Chan MT Liang SM 《The journal of gene medicine》2005,7(6):708-717
BACKGROUND: Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) causes a severe livestock disease, and the virus is an interesting target for virology and vaccine studies. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Here we evaluated comparatively three different viral antigen-encoding DNA sequences, delivered via two physical means (i.e., gene gun delivery into skin and electroporation delivery into muscle), for naked DNA-mediated vaccination in a mouse system. RESULTS: Both methods gave similar results, demonstrating commonality of the observed DNA vaccine effects. Immunization with a cDNA vector expressing the major viral antigen (VP1) alone routinely failed to induce the production of anti-VP1 or neutralizing antibodies in test mice. As a second approach, the plasmid L-VP1 that produces a transgenic membrane-anchored VP1 protein elicited a strong antibody response, but all test mice failed in the FMDV challenge experiment. In contrast, for mice immunized with the viral capsid precursor protein (P1) cDNA expression vector, both neutralizing antibodies and 80-100% protection in test mice were detected. CONCLUSIONS: This strategy of using the whole capsid precursor protein P1 cDNA for vaccination, intentionally without the use of virus-specific protease or other encoding genes for safety reasons, may thus be employed as a relevant experimental system for induction or upgrading of effective neutralizing antibody response, and as a convenient surrogate test system for DNA vaccination studies of FMDV and presumably other viral diseases. 相似文献
8.
Evidence for recombination between two different immunological types of foot-and-mouth disease virus. 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
J S Mackenzie W R Slade 《The Australian journal of experimental biology and medical science》1975,53(4):251-256
Recombination was observed between temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of two immunological types of foot-and-mouth disease virus which were distinguishable by two marker characteristics in addition to their antigenic type. Putative ts+ recombinants were isolated and the segregation patterns of their marker characteristics examined. The results are discussed in terms of the origin of new sub-type strains. 相似文献
9.
Rubinstein ND Doron-Faigenboim A Mayrose I Pupko T 《Molecular biology and evolution》2011,28(12):3297-3308
The selective forces acting on a protein-coding gene are commonly inferred using evolutionary codon models by contrasting the rate of nonsynonymous substitutions to the rate of synonymous substitutions. These models usually assume that the synonymous substitution rate, Ks, is homogenous across all sites, which is justified if synonymous sites are free from selection. However, a growing body of evidence indicates that the DNA and RNA levels of protein-coding genes are subject to varying degrees of selective constraints due to various biological functions encoded at these levels. In this paper, we develop evolutionary models that account for these layers of selection by allowing for both among-site variability of substitution rates at the DNA/RNA level (which leads to Ks variability among protein-coding sites) and among-site variability of substitution rates at the protein level (Ka variability). These models are constructed so that positive selection is either allowed or not. This enables statistical testing of positive selection when variability at the DNA/RNA substitution rate is accounted for. Using this methodology, we show that variability of the baseline DNA/RNA substitution rate is a widespread phenomenon in coding sequence data of mammalian genomes, most likely reflecting varying degrees of selection at the DNA and RNA levels. Additionally, we use simulations to examine the impact that accounting for the variability of the baseline DNA/RNA substitution rate has on the inference of positive selection. Our results show that ignoring this variability results in a high rate of erroneous positive-selection inference. Our newly developed model, which accounts for this variability, does not suffer from this problem and hence provides a likelihood framework for the inference of positive selection on a background of variability in the baseline DNA/RNA substitution rate. 相似文献
10.
Translation initiation dependent on the foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) internal ribosome entry site (IRES) occurs at two sites (Lab and Lb), 84 nucleotides (nt) apart. In vitro translation of an mRNA comprising the IRES and Lab-Lb intervening segment fused to a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter has been used to study the parameters influencing the ratio of the two products and the combined product yield as measures of relative initiation site usage and productive ribosome recruitment, respectively. With wild-type mRNA, ~40% of initiation occurred at the Lab site, which was increased to 90% by optimization of its context, but decreased to 20% by mutations that reduced downstream secondary structure, with no change in recruitment in either case. Inserting 5 nt into the pyrimidine-rich tract located just upstream of the Lab site increased initiation at this site by 75% and ribosome recruitment by 50%. Mutating the Lab site to RCG or RUN codons decreased recruitment by 20 to 30% but stimulated Lb initiation by 20 to 40%. An antisense oligodeoxynucleotide annealing across the Lab site inhibited initiation at both sites. These and related results lead to the following conclusions. Recruitment by the wild-type IRES is limited by its short oligopyrimidine tract. At least 90% of internal ribosome entry occurs at the Lab AUG, but initiation at this site is restricted by its poor context, despite a counteracting effect of downstream secondary structure. Initiation at the Lb site is by ribosomes that access it by linear scanning from the original entry site, and not by an independent entry process. 相似文献
11.
Reeve R Blignaut B Esterhuysen JJ Opperman P Matthews L Fry EE de Beer TA Theron J Rieder E Vosloo W O'Neill HG Haydon DT Maree FF 《PLoS computational biology》2010,6(12):e1001027
Identifying when past exposure to an infectious disease will protect against newly emerging strains is central to understanding the spread and the severity of epidemics, but the prediction of viral cross-protection remains an important unsolved problem. For foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) research in particular, improved methods for predicting this cross-protection are critical for predicting the severity of outbreaks within endemic settings where multiple serotypes and subtypes commonly co-circulate, as well as for deciding whether appropriate vaccine(s) exist and how much they could mitigate the effects of any outbreak. To identify antigenic relationships and their predictors, we used linear mixed effects models to account for variation in pairwise cross-neutralization titres using only viral sequences and structural data. We identified those substitutions in surface-exposed structural proteins that are correlates of loss of cross-reactivity. These allowed prediction of both the best vaccine match for any single virus and the breadth of coverage of new vaccine candidates from their capsid sequences as effectively as or better than serology. Sub-sequences chosen by the model-building process all contained sites that are known epitopes on other serotypes. Furthermore, for the SAT1 serotype, for which epitopes have never previously been identified, we provide strong evidence--by controlling for phylogenetic structure--for the presence of three epitopes across a panel of viruses and quantify the relative significance of some individual residues in determining cross-neutralization. Identifying and quantifying the importance of sites that predict viral strain cross-reactivity not just for single viruses but across entire serotypes can help in the design of vaccines with better targeting and broader coverage. These techniques can be generalized to any infectious agents where cross-reactivity assays have been carried out. As the parameterization uses pre-existing datasets, this approach quickly and cheaply increases both our understanding of antigenic relationships and our power to control disease. 相似文献
12.
《Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience》2018,12(2):215-223
The Brangus breed was developed to combine the superior characteristics of both of its founder breeds, Angus and Brahman. It combines the high adaptability to tropical and subtropical environments, disease resistance, and overall hardiness of Zebu cattle with the reproductive potential and carcass quality of Angus. It is known that the major histocompatibility complex (MHC, also known as bovine leucocyte antigen: BoLA), located on chromosome 23, encodes several genes involved in the adaptive immune response and may be responsible for adaptation to harsh environments. The objective of this work was to evaluate whether the local breed ancestry percentages in the BoLA locus of a Brangus population diverged from the estimated genome-wide proportions and to identify signatures of positive selection in this genomic region. For this, 167 animals (100 Brangus, 45 Angus and 22 Brahman) were genotyped using a high-density single nucleotide polymorphism array. The local ancestry analysis showed that more than half of the haplotypes (55.0%) shared a Brahman origin. This value was significantly different from the global genome-wide proportion estimated by cluster analysis (34.7% Brahman), and the proportion expected by pedigree (37.5% Brahman). The analysis of selection signatures by genetic differentiation (Fst) and extended haplotype homozygosity-based methods (iHS and Rsb) revealed 10 and seven candidate regions, respectively. The analysis of the genes located within these candidate regions showed mainly genes involved in immune response-related pathway, while other genes and pathways were also observed (cell surface signalling pathways, membrane proteins and ion-binding proteins). Our results suggest that the BoLA region of Brangus cattle may have been enriched with Brahman haplotypes as a consequence of selection processes to promote adaptation to subtropical environments. 相似文献
13.
The variation in nucleotide sequence observed in the envelope (E) gene and the prM (precursor of M protein) region of different
strains of Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) was analysed. Presence of selective forces acting on these regions was investigated
by computing the relative rates of synonymous (K
s) and nonsynonymous (K
a) substitutions. The ratioK
s/K
a was used as an indicator of the overall selective constraints on the amino acid sequence of JEV proteins. The possibility
that different regions of the gene may be subject to varying selective pressures was tested by dividing the gene into three
regions and estimating theK
s/K
a ratio for each region. On the basis of analysis of a limited number (17) of strains of JEV, evidence suggestive of positive
selection acting on certain regions of the E gene of the virus, and in some cases on the entire gene, was obtained. Analysis
ofK
a diversity in the prM region of 46 JEV strains grouped into three genotypes revealed that strains included in genotype II
were more heterogeneous than strains belonging to genotype I, while the differences between meanK
a values for genotypes I and III and genotypes II and III were not statistically significant. Analysis of host-specific heterogeneity
in the prM region revealed that pig isolates were more Xa-diverse than human isolates. 相似文献
14.
K.U. Anil B.P. Sreenivasa J.K. Mohapatra M. Hosamani Rakesh Kumar R. Venkataramanan 《Biologicals》2012,40(6):426-430
Sequence variability within the capsid coding region of the foot-and-mouth disease virus type A vaccine strain during serial in vitro passage was investigated. Specifically, two methods of virus propagation were utilized, a monolayer and suspension culture of BHK-21 cells. At three positions (VP2131 E-K in both monolayer and suspension passages, VP385 H-R in late monolayer passages and VP3139 K-E in only suspension passages), all mapped to surface exposed loops, amino acid substitutions were apparently fixed without reversion till the end of the passage regime. Interestingly, VP2131, 121 and VP385 which form part of the heparan sulphate binding pocket, showed a tendency to acquire positively charged amino acids in either monolayer or suspension environment probably to better interact with the negatively charged cell surface glycosaminoglycans. At three identified antigenically critical positions (VP279, VP3139 and VP1154), amino acids substitutions even in the absence of immune pressure were noticed. Hence both random drift and adaptive mutations attributable to the strong selective pressure exerted by the proposed cell surface alternate receptors could play a role in modifying the capsid sequence of cell culture propagated FMDV vaccine virus, which in turn may alter the desired potency of the vaccine formulations. 相似文献
15.
Expression of foot-and-mouth disease virus capsid proteins in silkworm-baculovirus expression system and its utilization as a subunit vaccine 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
Background
Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is a highly contagious disease of livestock that causes severe economic loss in susceptible cloven-hoofed animals. Although the traditional inactivated vaccine has been proved effective, it may lead to a new outbreak of FMD because of either incomplete inactivation of FMDV or the escape of live virus from vaccine production workshop. Thus, it is urgent to develop a novel FMDV vaccine that is safer, more effective and more economical than traditional vaccines.Methodology and Principal Findings
A recombinant silkworm baculovirus Bm-P12A3C which contained the intact P1-2A and 3C protease coding regions of FMDV Asia 1/HNK/CHA/05 was developed. Indirect immunofluorescence test and sandwich-ELISA were used to verify that Bm-P12A3C could express the target cassette. Expression products from silkworm were diluted to 30 folds and used as antigen to immunize cattle. Specific antibody was induced in all vaccinated animals. After challenge with virulent homologous virus, four of the five animals were completely protected, and clinical symptoms were alleviated and delayed in the remaining one. Furthermore, a PD50 (50% bovine protective dose) test was performed to assess the bovine potency of the subunit vaccine. The result showed the subunit vaccine could achieve 6.34 PD50 per dose.Conclusion
The results suggest that this strategy might be used to develop the new subunit FMDV vaccine. 相似文献16.
Unique amino acid substitutions in the capsid proteins of foot-and-mouth disease virus from a persistent infection in cell culture. 总被引:15,自引:13,他引:2 下载免费PDF全文
J Díez M Dvila C Escarmís M G Mateu J Dominguez J J Prez E Giralt J A Melero E Domingo 《Journal of virology》1990,64(11):5519-5528
Maintenance of a persistent foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) infection in BHK-21 cells involves a coevolution of cells and virus (J. C. de la Torre, E. Martínez-Salas, J. Díez, A. Villaverde, F. Gebauer, E. Rocha, M. Dávila, and E. Domingo, J. Virol. 62:2050-2058, 1988). The resident FMDV undergoes a number of phenotypic changes, including a gradual decrease in virion stability. Here we report the nucleotide sequence of the P1 genomic segment of the virus rescued after 100 passages of the carrier cells (R100). Only 5 of 15 mutations in P1 of R100 were silent. Nine amino acid substitutions were fixed on the viral capsid during persistence, and three of the variant amino acids are not represented in the corresponding position of any picornavirus sequenced to date. Cysteine at position 7 of VP3, that provides disulfide bridges at the FMDV fivefold axis, was substituted by valine, as determined by RNA, cDNA, and protein sequencing. The modified virus shows high buoyant density in cesium chloride and depicts the same sensitivity to photoinactivation by intercalating dyes as the parental FMDV C-S8c1. Amino acid substitutions fixed in VP1 resulted in altered antigenicity, as revealed by reactivity with monoclonal antibodies. In addition to defining at the molecular level the alterations the FMDV capsid underwent during persistence, the results show that positions which are highly invariant in an RNA genome may change when viral replication occurs in a modified environment. 相似文献
17.
Carneiro M Albert FW Melo-Ferreira J Galtier N Gayral P Blanco-Aguiar JA Villafuerte R Nachman MW Ferrand N 《Molecular biology and evolution》2012,29(7):1837-1849
The nearly neutral theory of molecular evolution predicts that the efficacy of both positive and purifying selection is a function of the long-term effective population size (N(e)) of a species. Under this theory, the efficacy of natural selection should increase with N(e). Here, we tested this simple prediction by surveying ~1.5 to 1.8 Mb of protein coding sequence in the two subspecies of the European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus algirus and O. c. cuniculus), a mammal species characterized by high levels of nucleotide diversity and N(e) estimates for each subspecies on the order of 1 × 10(6). When the segregation of slightly deleterious mutations and demographic effects were taken into account, we inferred that >60% of amino acid substitutions on the autosomes were driven to fixation by positive selection. Moreover, we inferred that a small fraction of new amino acid mutations (<4%) are effectively neutral (defined as 0 < N(e)s < 1) and that this fraction was negatively correlated with a gene's expression level. Consistent with models of recurrent adaptive evolution, we detected a negative correlation between levels of synonymous site polymorphism and the rate of protein evolution, although the correlation was weak and nonsignificant. No systematic X chromosome-autosome difference was found in the efficacy of selection. For example, the proportion of adaptive substitutions was significantly higher on the X chromosome compared with the autosomes in O. c. algirus but not in O. c. cuniculus. Our findings support widespread positive and purifying selection in rabbits and add to a growing list of examples suggesting that differences in N(e) among taxa play a substantial role in determining rates and patterns of protein evolution. 相似文献
18.
19.
Deterministic, compensatory mutational events in the capsid of foot-and-mouth disease virus in response to the introduction of mutations found in viruses from persistent infections 下载免费PDF全文
The evolution of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) (biological clone C-S8c1) in persistently infected cells led to the emergence of a variant (R100) that displayed increased virulence, reduced stability, and other modified phenotypic traits. Some mutations fixed in the R100 genome involved a cluster of highly conserved residues around the capsid pores that participate in interactions with each other and/or between capsid protomers. We have investigated phenotypic and genotypic changes that occurred when these replacements were introduced into the C-S8c1 capsid. The C3007V and M3014L mutations exerted no effect on plaque size or viral yield during lytic infections, or on virion stability, but led to a reduction in biological fitness; the D3009A mutation caused drastic reductions in plaque size and viability. Remarkably, competition of the C3007V mutant with the nonmutated virus invariably resulted in the fixation of the D3009A mutation in the C3007V capsid. In turn, the presence of the D3009A mutation invariably led to the fixation of the M3014L mutation. In both cases, two individually disadvantageous mutations led, together, to an increase in fitness, as the double mutants outcompeted the nonmutated genotype. The higher fitness of C3007V/D3009A was related to a faster multiplication rate. These observations provide evidence for a chain of linked, compensatory mutational events in a defined region of the FMDV capsid. Furthermore, they indicate that the clustering of unique amino acid replacements in viruses from persistent infections may also occur in cytolytic infections in response to changes caused by previous mutations without an involvement of the new mutations in the adaptation to a different environment. 相似文献
20.
Evidence of the coevolution of antigenicity and host cell tropism of foot-and-mouth disease virus in vivo 下载免费PDF全文
Tami C Taboga O Berinstein A Núñez JI Palma EL Domingo E Sobrino F Carrillo E 《Journal of virology》2003,77(2):1219-1226
In this work we analyze the antigenic properties and the stability in cell culture of virus mutants recovered upon challenge of peptide-vaccinated cattle with foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) C3 Arg85. Previously, we showed that a significant proportion of 29 lesions analyzed (41%) contained viruses with single amino acid replacements (R141G, L144P, or L147P) within a major antigenic site located at the G-H loop of VP1, known to participate also in interactions with integrin receptors. Here we document that no replacements at this site were found in viruses from 12 lesions developed in six control animals upon challenge with FMDV C3 Arg85. Sera from unprotected, vaccinated animals exhibited poor neutralization titers against mutants recovered from them. Sequence analyses of the viruses recovered upon 10 serial passages in BHK-21 and FBK-2 cells in the presence of preimmune (nonneutralizing) sera revealed that mutants reverted to the parental sequence, suggesting an effect of the amino acid replacements in the interaction of the viruses with cells. Parallel passages in the presence of subneutralizing concentrations of immune homologous sera resulted in the maintenance of mutations R141G and L147P, while mutation L144P reverted to the C3 Arg85 sequence. Reactivity with a panel of FMDV type C-specific monoclonal antibodies indicated that mutant viruses showed altered antigenicity. These results suggest that the selective pressure exerted by host humoral immune response can play a role in both the selection and stability of antigenic FMDV variants and that such variants can manifest alterations in cell tropism. 相似文献