Attenuation of the Langat tick-borne flavivirus by chimerization with mosquito-borne flavivirus dengue type 4

AUTOR(ES)
FONTE

National Academy of Sciences

RESUMO

Langat virus (LGT) strain TP21 is the most attenuated of the tick-borne flaviviruses for humans. Even though LGT has low-level neurovirulence for humans, it, and its more attenuated egg-passage derivative, strain E5, exhibit significant neurovirulence and neuroinvasiveness in normal mice, albeit less than that associated with tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV), the most virulent of the tick-borne flaviviruses. We sought to reduce or ablate these viral phenotypes of TP21 and E5 by using a strategy that had been used successfully in the past to reduce neurovirulence and abolish neuroinvasiveness of TBEV, namely substitution of structural protein genes of the tick-borne flavivirus for the corresponding genes of dengue type 4 virus (DEN4). In pursuit of these objectives different combinations of LGT genes were substituted into the DEN4 genome but only chimeras containing LGT structural proteins premembrane (preM) and envelope glycoprotein (E) were viable. The infectious LGT(preM-E)/DEN4 chimeras were restricted in replication in simian cell cultures but grew to moderately high titer in mosquito cell culture. Also, the chimeras were at least 5,000 times less neurovirulent than their parental LGT virus in suckling mice. Significantly, the chimeras lacked detectable evidence of neuroinvasiveness after i.p. inoculation of Swiss mice or the more permissive SCID mice with 105 or 107 plaque-forming units (PFU), respectively. Nonetheless, i.p. inoculation of Swiss mice with 10 or 103 PFU of either chimeric virus induced LGT neutralizing antibodies and resistance to fatal encephalitis caused by i.p. challenge with LGT TP21. The implications of these observations for development of a live attenuated TBEV vaccine are discussed.

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