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Volume 105,
Issue 2,
2024
Volume 105, Issue 2, 2024
- Reviews
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Immunogenicity, safety and duration of protection afforded by chikungunya virus vaccines undergoing human clinical trials
More LessBackground. Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) causes chikungunya fever and has been responsible for major global epidemics of arthritic disease over the past two decades. Multiple CHIKV vaccine candidates are currently undergoing or have undergone human clinical trials, with one vaccine candidate receiving FDA approval. This scoping review was performed to evaluate the ‘efficacy’, ‘safety’ and ‘duration of protection’ provided by CHIKV vaccine candidates in human clinical trials.
Methods. This scoping literature review addresses studies involving CHIKV vaccine clinical trials using available literature on the PubMed, Medline Embase, Cochrane Library and Clinicaltrial.gov databases published up to 25 August 2023. Covidence software was used to structure information and review the studies included in this article.
Results. A total of 1138 studies were screened and, after removal of duplicate studies, 12 relevant studies were thoroughly reviewed to gather information. This review summarizs that all seven CHIKV vaccine candidates achieved over 90 % seroprotection against CHIKV after one or two doses. All vaccines were able to provide neutralizing antibody protection for at least 28 days.
Conclusions. A variety of vaccine technologies have been used to develop CHIKV vaccine candidates. With one vaccine candidate having recently received FDA approval, it is likely that further CHIKV vaccines will be available commercially in the near future.
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- ICTV Virus Taxonomy Profiles
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ICTV Virus Taxonomy Profile: Filoviridae 2024
Filoviridae is a family of negative-sense RNA viruses with genomes of about 13.1–20.9 kb that infect fish, mammals and reptiles. The filovirid genome is a linear, non-segmented RNA with five canonical open reading frames (ORFs) that encode a nucleoprotein (NP), a polymerase cofactor (VP35), a glycoprotein (GP1,2), a transcriptional activator (VP30) and a large protein (L) containing an RNA-directed RNA polymerase (RdRP) domain. All filovirid genomes encode additional proteins that vary among genera. Several filovirids (e.g., Ebola virus, Marburg virus) are pathogenic for humans and highly virulent. This is a summary of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) Report on the family Filoviridae, which is available at www.ictv.global/report/filoviridae.
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ICTV Virus Taxonomy Profile: Kolmioviridae 2024
Kolmioviridae is a family for negative-sense RNA viruses with circular, viroid-like genomes of about 1.5–1.7 kb that are maintained in mammals, amphibians, birds, fish, insects and reptiles. Deltaviruses, for instance, can cause severe hepatitis in humans. Kolmiovirids encode delta antigen (DAg) and replicate using host-cell DNA-directed RNA polymerase II and ribozymes encoded in their genome and antigenome. They require evolutionary unrelated helper viruses to provide envelopes and incorporate helper virus proteins for infectious particle formation. This is a summary of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) Report on the family Kolmioviridae, which is available at ictv.global/report/kolmioviridae.
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- Animal
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- RNA Viruses
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A conserved methyltransferase active site residue of Zika virus NS5 is required for the restriction of STING activation and interferon expression
Zika virus (ZIKV) is a re-emerging RNA virus and causes major public health events due to its link to severe neurological complications in foetuses and neonates. The cGAS–STING signalling pathway regulates innate immunity and plays an important role in the invasion of DNA and RNA viruses. This study reveals a distinct mechanism by which ZIKV restricts the cGAS–STING signalling to repress IFN-β expression. ZIKV attenuates IFN-β expression induced by DNA viruses (herpes simplex virus type 1, HSV-1) or two double-stranded DNAs (dsDNA90 and HSV120) in mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs). Notably, ZIKV NS5, the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, was responsible for the repression of IFN-β. NS5 interacts with STING in the cytoplasm, suppresses IRF3 phosphorylation and nucleus localization and promotes the cleavage of STING K48-linked polyubiquitination. Furthermore, the NS5 methyltransferase (MTase) domain interacts with STING to restrict STING-induced IFN-β expression. Interestingly, point mutation analyses of conserved methyltransferase active site residue D146 indicate that it is critical for repressing IFN-β expression induced by STING stimulation in cGAS–STING signalling.
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Newcastle disease virus regulates its replication by instigating oxidative stress-driven Sirtuin 7 production
More LessReactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation inside the cells instigates oxidative stress, activating stress-responsive genes. The viral strategies for promoting stressful conditions and utilizing the induced host proteins to enhance their replication remain elusive. The present work investigates the impact of oxidative stress responses on Newcastle disease virus (NDV) pathogenesis. Here, we show that the progression of NDV infection varies with intracellular ROS levels. Additionally, the results demonstrate that NDV infection modulates the expression of oxidative stress-responsive genes, majorly sirtuin 7 (SIRT7), a NAD+-dependent deacetylase. The modulation of SIRT7 protein, both through overexpression and knockdown, significantly impacts the replication dynamics of NDV in DF-1 cells. The activation of SIRT7 is found to be associated with the positive regulation of cellular protein deacetylation. Lastly, the results suggested that NDV-driven SIRT7 alters NAD+ metabolism in vitro and in ovo. We concluded that the elevated expression of NDV-mediated SIRT7 protein with enhanced activity metabolizes the NAD+ to deacetylase the host proteins, thus contributing to high virus replication.
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Latent gammaherpesvirus infection enhances type I IFN response and reduces virus spread in an influenza A virus co-infection model
Infections with persistent or latent viruses alter host immune homeostasis and have potential to affect the outcome of concomitant acute viral infections such as influenza A virus (IAV). Gammaherpesviruses establish life-long infections and require an on-going immune response to control reactivation. We have used a murine model of co-infection to investigate the response to IAV infection in mice latently infected with the gammaherpesvirus MHV-68. Over the course of infection, latently infected BALB/c mice showed less weight loss, clinical signs, pulmonary cellular infiltration and expression of inflammatory mediators than naïve mice infected with IAV and had significantly more activated CD8+ T cells in the lungs. Four days after IAV infection, virus spread in the lungs of latently infected animals was significantly lower than in naïve animals. By 7 days after IAV infection latently infected lungs express elevated levels of cytokines and chemokines indicating they are primed to respond to the secondary infection. Investigation at an early time point showed that 24 h after IAV infection co-infected animals had higher expression of IFNβ and Ddx58 (RIG-I) and a range of ISGs than mice infected with IAV alone suggesting that the type I IFN response plays a role in the protective effect. This effect was mouse strain dependent and did not occur in 129/Sv/Ev mice. These results offer insight into innate immune mechanisms that could be utilized to protect against IAV infection and highlight on-going and persistent viral infections as a significant factor impacting the severity of acute respiratory infections.
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- Insect viruses
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- DNA
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Evolutionary analysis and biological characterization of a novel alphabaculovirus isolated from Mythimna separata
Baculoviruses are insect-specific pathogens. Novel baculovirus isolates provide new options for the biological control of pests. Therefore, research into the biological characteristics of newly isolated baculoviruses, including accurate classification and nomenclature, is important. In this study, a baculovirus was isolated from Mythimna separata and its complete genome sequence was determined by next-generation sequencing. The double-stranded DNA genome was 153 882 bp in length, encoding 163 open reading frames. The virus was identified as a variant of Mamestra brassicae multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus (MbMNPV) and designated Mamestra brassicae multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus CHN1 (MbMNPV-CHN1) according to ultrastructural analysis, genome comparison and phylogenetic analysis. Phylogenetic inference placed MbMNPV-CHN1 in a clade containing isolates of MacoNPV-A, MacoNPV-B and MbMNPV, which we have designated the Mb-McNPV group. The genomes of isolates in the Mb-McNPV group exhibited a high degree of collinearity with relatively minor differences in the content of annotated open reading frames. The development of codon usage bias in the Mb-McNPV group was affected mainly by natural selection. MbMNPV-CHN1 shows high infectivity against seven species of Lepidoptera. The yield of MbMNPV-CHN1 in the fourth- and fifth-instar M. separata larvae was 6.25×109–1.23×1010 OBs/cadaver. Our data provide insights into the classification, host range and virulence differences among baculoviruses of the Mb-McNPV group, as well as a promising potential new baculoviral insecticide.
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Virus-host coevolutionary analyses of an Alphabaculovirus with a wide host range
More LessBaculoviruses are highly host specific, and their host range is usually restricted to a single or a few closely related insect species, except for few virus species, e.g. Alphabaculovirus aucalifonicae and Alphabaculovirus mabrassicae. In this study, two new alphabaculovirus isolates were isolated from the larvae of Mamestra brassicae and Mythimna separata, which were named as Mamestra brassicae multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus isolate QD (MbMNPV-QD) and Mythimna separata multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus isolate Hb (MyseMNPV-Hb), respectively. The Kimura two-parameter values based on the concatenated 38 core genes of baculovirus revealed that MbMNPV (isolates QD/CHb1/K1/CTa), MyseMNPV-Hb, Helicoverpa armigera multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus (HearMNPV) and Mamestra configurata nucleopolyhedrovirus B (MacoNPV-B) were different isolates of a same virus species. A phylogenetic tree of baculoviruses and nudiviruses constructed from their 20 homologous gene sequences, and that of their isolated hosts constructed from 13 protein-coding genes of the insect mitochondrial genomes, were used to analyse the coevolution of baculoviruses with their isolated hosts. The results showed that M. brassicae was the most likely ancestral host of these virus isolates, included MbMNPV isolates, MyseMNPV-Hb, HearMNPV, and MacoNPV-B. Therefore, we concluded that these virus isolates belong to the existing virus species – Alphabaculovirus mabrassicae with M. brassicae as their ancestral host.
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Volumes and issues
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Volume 106 (2025)
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Volume 105 (2024)
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Volume 103 (2022)
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