1. Expression of porcine fusion protein IRF7/3(5D) efficiently controls foot-and-mouth disease virus replication
- Author
-
Teresa de los Santos, Fayna Diaz-San Segundo, Charles R. Long, James Zhu, Danielle Hickman, Luis L. Rodriguez, and Lisbeth Ramírez-Carvajal
- Subjects
Interferon Inducers ,Swine ,viruses ,Interferon Regulatory Factor-7 ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Immunology ,Genetic Vectors ,Gene Expression ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virus Replication ,Microbiology ,Adenoviridae ,Cell Line ,Mice ,Viral Proteins ,In vivo ,Virology ,Vaccines and Antiviral Agents ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Vaccines, Synthetic ,Interferon inducer ,biology ,Vaccination ,Viral Vaccines ,biology.organism_classification ,Viral replication ,Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus ,Insect Science ,Foot-and-Mouth Disease ,Interferon Type I ,biology.protein ,IRF7 ,Cattle ,Antibody ,Foot-and-mouth disease virus ,Interferon type I ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Several studies have demonstrated that the delivery of type I, II, or III interferons (IFNs) by inoculation of a replication-defective human adenovirus 5 (Ad5) vector expressing IFNs can effectively control foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in cattle and swine during experimental infections. However, relatively high doses are required to achieve protection. In this study, we identified the functional properties of a porcine fusion protein, poIRF7/3(5D), as a biotherapeutic and enhancer of IFN activity against FMD virus (FMDV). We showed that poIRF7/3(5D) is a potent inducer of type I IFNs, including alpha IFN (IFN-α), IFN-β, and IFN-ω but not type III IFN (interleukin-28B), without inducing cytotoxicity. Expression of poIRF7/3(5D) significantly and steadily reduced FMDV titers by up to 6 log 10 units in swine and bovine cell lines. Treatment with an IFN receptor inhibitor (B18R) combined with an anti-IFN-α antibody neutralized the antiviral activity in the supernatants of cells transduced with an Ad5 vector expressing poIRF7/3(5D) [Ad5-poIRF7/3(5D)]. However, several transcripts with known antiviral function, including type I IFNs, were still highly upregulated (range of increase, 8-fold to over 500-fold) by poIRF7/3(5D) in the presence of B18R. Furthermore, the sera of mice treated with Ad5-poIRF7/3(5D) showed antiviral activity that was associated with the induction of high levels of IFN-α and resulted in complete protection against FMDV challenge at 6, 24, or 48 h posttreatment. This study highlights for the first time the antiviral potential of Ad5-poIRF7/3(5D) in vitro and in vivo against FMDV. IMPORTANCE FMD remains one of the most devastating diseases that affect livestock worldwide. Effective vaccine formulations are available but are serotype specific and require approximately 7 days before they are able to elicit protective immunity. We have shown that vector-delivered IFN is an option to protect animals against many FMDV serotypes as soon as 24 h and for about 4 days postadministration. Here we demonstrate that delivery of a constitutively active transcription factor that induces the production of endogenous IFNs and potentially other antiviral genes is a viable strategy to protect against FMD.
- Published
- 2014