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Engineering viable foot-and-mouth disease viruses with increased thermostability as a step in the development of improved vaccines.

Authors :
Mateo R
Luna E
Rincón V
Mateu MG
Source :
Journal of virology [J Virol] 2008 Dec; Vol. 82 (24), pp. 12232-40. Date of Electronic Publication: 2008 Oct 01.
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

We have rationally engineered foot-and-mouth disease virus to increase its stability against thermal dissociation into subunits without disrupting the many biological functions needed for its infectivity. Amino acid side chains located near the capsid intersubunit interfaces and either predicted or found to be dispensable for infectivity were replaced by others that could establish new disulfide bonds or electrostatic interactions between subunits. Two engineered viruses were normally infectious, genetically stable, and antigenically indistinguishable from the natural virus but showed substantially increased stability against irreversible dissociation. Electrostatic interactions mediated this stabilizing effect. For foot-and-mouth disease virus and other viruses, some evidence had suggested that an increase in virion stability could be linked to an impairment of infectivity. The results of the present study show, in fact, that virion thermostability against dissociation into subunits may not be selectively constrained by functional requirements for infectivity. The thermostable viruses obtained, and others similarly engineered, could be used for the production, using current procedures, of foot-and-mouth disease vaccines that are less dependent on a faultless cold chain. In addition, introduction of those stabilizing mutations in empty (nucleic acid-free) capsids could facilitate the production of infection-risk-free vaccines against the disease, one of the economically most important animal diseases worldwide.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1098-5514
Volume :
82
Issue :
24
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of virology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
18829763
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01553-08