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Virion

Virion: A term referring to the complete and infectious form of a virus, consisting of the genetic material (DNA or RNA) and a protein coat.
Virions are the basic structural unit and infectious agent of a virus, responsible for transmitting the virus from one host to another.
Virion research aims to understand the structure, composition, and behavior of these viral particles, which is crucial for developing effective antiviral treatments and preventive measures.
PubCompare.ai's AI-driven platform can streamline virion research by helping scientists locate relevant protocols from literature, preprints, and patents, and leverage AI-driven comparisons to identify the most accurate and reproducble methods, thus accelerating the pace of discovery in this vital field of study.

Most cited protocols related to «Virion»

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Publication 2013
Capsid Proteins Clathrin Human Herpesvirus 1 Microtubule-Associated Proteins Reconstructive Surgical Procedures Rous Sarcoma Virion
Two reference databases of viral protein sequences were built for VirSorter and are available in the iPlant Discovery Environment (Data/Community_Data/iVirus/VirSorter/Database). The first includes 114,297 proteins from viruses infecting bacteria or archaea in RefSeqVirus genomes (as of January 2014), hereafter named “RefSeqABVir.” Protein clusters (PCs) were defined using MCL clustering (Enright, Van Dongen & Ouzounis, 2002 (link)) of these proteins (inflation 2.0) based on their reciprocal blastp comparisons (threshold of 50 on bit score and 10−03 on E-value). The 9,735 PCs with at least 3 sequences were used to define a profile database searchable with HMMER3 tools (Eddy, 2011 (link)). The remaining 34,668 unclustered sequences were formatted for a blastp search. All PCs that did not contain any sequences from Caudovirales and unclustered sequences from viruses other than Caudovirales were marked as “Non-Caudovirales.”
The RefSeqABVir database was then augmented by virome sequences sampled from freshwater, seawater, and human gut, lung and saliva, resulting in an extended version of the reference database (hereafter named “Viromes”) which includes both virome and RefSeqABVir sequences. This combined reference dataset should help to detect new viruses for which no cultivated reference sequence is available. When only raw reads were available, viromes were assembled using Newbler (threshold of 98% identity on 35bp). The resulting contigs were then checked for the presence of cellular genome sequences, and only the 68 viromes for which no 16S rRNA genes were retained (see Table S1 for a complete list of these viromes). Contigs assembled from these 68 viromes were then manually inspected (through annotations generated by Metavir; Roux et al., 2014a (link)) and revealed no identifiable cellular genome sequences (i.e., no sequence contained more than 2 genes that matched a cellular genome and were not found in any known virus). A total of 146,521 complete predicted proteins from this quality-controlled dataset were then clustered with the 114,297 proteins from RefSeqABVir, leading to 15,673 clusters with 3 sequences or more, and 88,052 unclustered sequences. PCs from the combined Viromes database were used to create a profile database searchable with HMMER3, and the 34,338 unclustered sequences from RefseqABVir were formatted for BLAST search (unclustered sequences from viromes were not added to the database to prevent the inclusion of contaminating sequences).
Within these databases, viral “hallmark” genes were defined though a text-searching script looking for “major capsid protein,” “portal,” “terminase large subunit,” “spike,” “tail,” “virion formation” or “coat” annotations. After a manual curation step removing genes with more general annotation such as “protease” or “chaperone,” 826 PCs or single genes were identified as “viral hallmark genes.” This latter point meant removing domains also matching “protease” or “chaperone” domains and was conducted to minimize false positives for our viral hallmark genes category by extra-cautiously avoiding PCs that might include domains that could derive from either both viruses or microbes.
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Publication 2015
Bacteria Capsid Proteins Caudovirales Cells Gene Annotation Genes Genes, Viral Genome Genome, Archaeal Homo sapiens Lung Molecular Chaperones Peptide Hydrolases Proteins Protein Subunits Ribosomal RNA Genes RNA, Ribosomal, 16S Saliva Tail terminase Viral Proteins Virion Virome Virus
Full length HIV-1 genomic RNA was gently purified from NL4-3 virions (Genbank AF324493). The RNA was equilibrated in a native buffer [50 mM Hepes (pH 8.0), 200 mM potassium acetate (pH 8.0), 3 mM MgCl2] at 37 °C for 15 min and treated with 1M710 (link). Sites of 2′-hydroxyl modification were identified over read lengths spanning several hundred nucleotides using 31 primer extension reactions resolved by fluorescence-detected capillary electrophoresis6 (link),11 (link). Pairing probabilities were determined using RNA-Decoder13 (link) and secondary structure models were developed by incorporating SHAPE reactivities as a pseudo-free energy change term, in conjunction with nearest-neighbor parameters, in an accurate thermodynamics-based prediction algorithm22 (link),23 (link).
Publication 2009
Buffers Capillaries Fluorescence Genome HEPES HIV-1 Hydroxyl Radical Magnesium Chloride Nucleotides Oligonucleotide Primers Potassium Acetate Virion
Predicted proteins from reference viral genomes from NCBI and VOG database viral proteins were combined to generate v-scores, which resulted in a total of 633,194 proteins. Redundancy was removed from the viral protein dataset using CD-HIT (v4.6) [56 (link)] with an identity cutoff of 95%, which resulted in a total of 240,728 viral proteins. This was the final dataset used to generate v-scores. All KEGG HMM profiles were used to annotate the viral proteins. A v-score for each KEGG HMM profile was determined by the number of significant (e-value < 1e−5) hits by hmmsearch, divided by 100, and a maximum value was set at 10 after division. The same v-score generation was done for Pfam and VOG databases. Any HMM profile with no significant hits to the virus dataset was given a v-score of zero. For KEGG and Pfam databases, any annotation that was given a v-score above zero and contained the keyword “phage” was given a minimum v-score of 1. To highlight viral hallmark genes, any annotation within all three databases with the keyword portal, terminase, spike, capsid, sheath, tail, coat, virion, lysin, holin, base plate, lysozyme, head, or structural was given a minimum v-score of 1. Non-prokaryotic virus annotations (e.g., reovirus core-spike protein) were not considered. Each HMM is assigned a v-score and represents a metric of virus association (i.e., do not take into account virus specificity or association with non-viruses) and are manually tuned to put greater weight on viral hallmark genes (Additional File 4: Table S4). Overall, annotations that are likely non-viral will have a low v-score whereas annotations that are commonly associated with viruses will have a high v-score. Raw HMM table outputs for v-score generation can be found in Additional Files 5, 6, and 7 for KEGG, Pfam, and VOG, respectively (Additional File 5: Table S5, Additional File 6: Table S6, and Additional File 7: Table S7).
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Publication 2020
Bacteriophages Capsid Proteins Genes, Viral Genome Head lysin, gastropoda M protein, multiple myeloma Muramidase Prokaryotic Cells Proteins Reoviridae Satellite Viruses Staphylococcal Protein A Tail terminase Viral Genome Viral Proteins Virion Virus
Monocytes were isolated and incubated with GM-CSF and IL-4 to induce dendritic cell differentiation. Pseudotyped viruses and virus-like particles were produced by transient transfection of 293FT cells using TransIT-293 (Mirus). Infections were performed by incubating 105 MDDCs in 96 well U bottom plates in the presence of 8 µg/ml polybrene. Cell surface staining of activation markers was performed 48h after infection. shRNA vectors carrying GFP were transduced into fresh monocytes together with SIVVLP(G) and dendritic cell differentiation was induced. More than 90% of cells were routinely transduced and cells were challenged at day 4 with HDVIRESRFP(G) or other control PAMPs.
Publication 2010
Cells Cloning Vectors Dendrites Dendritic Cells Differentiations, Cell Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor Infection Macular Edema, Cystoid Monocytes Pathogen-Associated Molecular Pattern Molecules Polybrene Pseudotyped Viruses Short Hairpin RNA Transfection Transients Virion

Most recents protocols related to «Virion»

Example 1

a. Materials and Methods

i. Vector Construction

1. Virus-Like Particle

As most broadly neutralizing HPV antibodies are derived from the highly conserved N-terminal region of L2, amino acids 14-122 of HPV16 L2 were used to create HBc VLPs. L2 with flanking linker regions was inserted into the tip of the a-helical spike of an HBc gene copy which was fused to another copy of HBc lacking the L2 insert. This arrangement allows the formation of HBc dimers that contain only a single copy of L2, increasing VLP stability (Peyret et al. 2015). This heterodimer is referred to as HBche-L2. A dicot plant-optimized HPV16 L2 coding sequence was designed based upon the sequence of GenBank Accession No. CAC51368.1 and synthesized in vitro using synthetic oligonucleotides by the method described (Stemmer et al., 1995). The plant-optimized L2 nucleotide sequence encoding residues 1-473 is posted at GenBank Accession No. KC330735. PCR end-tailoring was used to insert Xbal and SpeI sites flanking the L2 aa 14-122 using primers L2-14-Xba-F (SEQ ID NO. 1: CGTCTAGAGTCCGCAACCCAACTTTACAAG) and L2-122-Spe-R (SEQ ID NO. 2: G GGACTAGTTGGGGCACCAGCATC). The SpeI site was fused to a sequence encoding a 6His tag, and the resulting fusion was cloned into a geminiviral replicon vector (Diamos, 2016) to produce pBYe3R2K2Mc-L2(14-122)6H.

The HBche heterodimer VLP system was adapted from Peyret et al (2015). Using the plant optimized HBc gene (Huang et al., 2009), inventors constructed a DNA sequence encoding a dimer comprising HBc aa 1-149, a linker (G2S)5G (SEQ ID NO. 39), HBc aa 1-77, a linker GT(G4S)2 (SEQ ID NO. 40), HPV-16 L2 aa 14-122, a linker (GGS)2GSSGGSGG (SEQ ID NO. 41), and HBc aa 78-176. The dimer sequence was generated using multiple PCR steps including overlap extensions and insertion of BamHI and SpeI restriction sites flanking the L2 aa 14-122, using primers L2-14-Bam-F (SEQ ID NO. 3: CAGGATCCGCAACC CAACTTTACAAGAC) and L2-122-Spe-R (SEQ ID NO. 2). The HBche-L2 coding sequence was inserted into a geminiviral replicon binary vector pBYR2eK2M (FIG. 3), which includes the following elements: CaMV 35S promoter with duplicated enhancer (Huang et al., 2009), 5′ UTR of N. benthamiana psaK2 gene (Diamos et al., 2016), intron-containing 3′ UTR and terminator of tobacco extensin (Rosenthal et al, 2018), CaMV 35S 3′ terminator (Rosenthal et al, 2018), and Rb7 matrix attachment region (Diamos et al., 2016).

2. Recombinant Immune Complex

The recombinant immune complex (RIC) vector was adapted from Kim et al., (2015). The HPV-16 L2 (aa 14-122) segment was inserted into the BamHI and SpeI sites of the gene encoding humanized mAb 6D8 heavy chain, resulting in 6D8 epitope-tagged L2. The heavy chain fusion was inserted into an expression cassette linked to a 6D8 kappa chain expression cassette, all inserted into a geminiviral replicon binary vector (FIG. 3, RIC vector). Both cassettes contain CaMV 35S promoter with duplicated enhancer (Huang et al., 2009), 5′ UTR of N. benthamiana psaK2 gene (Diamos et al., 2016), intron-containing 3′ UTR and terminator of tobacco extensin (Rosenthal et al, 2018), and Rb7 matrix attachment region (Diamos et al., 2016).

ii. Agroinfiltration of Nicotiana benthamiana Leaves

Binary vectors were separately introduced into Agrobacterium tumefaciens EHA105 by electroporation. The resulting strains were verified by restriction digestion or PCR, grown overnight at 30° C., and used to infiltrate leaves of 5- to 6-week-old N. benthamiana maintained at 23-25° C. Briefly, the bacteria were pelleted by centrifugation for 5 minutes at 5,000 g and then resuspended in infiltration buffer (10 mM 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid (MES), pH 5.5 and 10 mM MgSO4) to OD600=0.2, unless otherwise described. The resulting bacterial suspensions were injected by using a syringe without needle into leaves through a small puncture (Huang et al. 2004). Plant tissue was harvested after 5 DPI, or as stated for each experiment. Leaves producing GFP were photographed under UV illumination generated by a B-100AP lamp (UVP, Upland, CA).

iii. Protein Extraction

Total protein extract was obtained by homogenizing agroinfiltrated leaf samples with 1:5 (w:v) ice cold extraction buffer (25 mM sodium phosphate, pH 7.4, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% Triton X-100, 10 mg/mL sodium ascorbate, 0.3 mg/mL PMSF) using a Bullet Blender machine (Next Advance, Averill Park, NY) following the manufacturer's instruction. To enhance solubility, homogenized tissue was rotated at room temperature or 4° C. for 30 minutes. The crude plant extract was clarified by centrifugation at 13,000 g for 10 minutes at 4° C. Necrotic leaf tissue has reduced water weight, which can lead to inaccurate measurements based on leaf mass. Therefore, extracts were normalized based on total protein content by Bradford protein assay kit (Bio-Rad) with bovine serum albumin as standard.

iv. SDS-PAGE and Western Blot

Clarified plant protein extract was mixed with sample buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, 2% SDS, 10% glycerol, 0.02% bromophenol blue) and separated on 4-15% polyacrylamide gels (Bio-Rad). For reducing conditions, 0.5M DTT was added, and the samples were boiled for 10 minutes prior to loading. Polyacrylamide gels were either transferred to a PVDF membrane or stained with Coomassie stain (Bio-Rad) following the manufacturer's instructions. For L2 detection, the protein transferred membranes were blocked with 5% dry milk in PBST (PBS with 0.05% tween-20) overnight at 4° C. and probed with polyclonal rabbit anti-L2 diluted 1:5000 in 1% PBSTM, followed by goat anti-rabbit horseradish peroxidase conjugate (Sigma). Bound antibody was detected with ECL reagent (Amersham).

v. Immunization of Mice and Sample Collection

All animals were handled in accordance to the Animal Welfare Act and Arizona State University IACUC. Female BALB/C mice, 6-8 weeks old, were immunized subcutaneously with purified plant-expressed L2 (14-122), HBche-L2 VLP, L2 RIC, or PBS mixed 1:1 with Imject® Alum (Thermo Scientific, Rockford, IL). In all treatment groups, the total weight of antigen was set to deliver an equivalent 5 μg of L2. Doses were given on days 0, 21, and 42. Serum collection was done as described (Santi et al. 2008) by submandibular bleed on days 0, 21, 42, and 63.

vi. Antibody Measurements

Mouse antibody titers were measured by ELISA. Bacterially-expressed L2 (amino acids 11-128) was bound to 96-well high-binding polystyrene plates (Corning), and the plates were blocked with 5% nonfat dry milk in PBST. After washing the wells with PBST (PBS with 0.05% Tween 20), the diluted mouse sera were added and incubated. Mouse antibodies were detected by incubation with polyclonal goat anti-mouse IgG-horseradish peroxidase conjugate (Sigma). The plate was developed with TMB substrate (Pierce) and the absorbance was read at 450 nm. Endpoint titers were taken as the reciprocal of the lowest dilution which produced an OD450 reading twice the background. IgG1 and IgG2a antibodies were measured with goat-anti mouse IgG1 or IgG2a horseradish peroxidase conjugate.

vii. Electron Microscopy

Purified samples of HBche or HBche-L2 were initially incubated on 75/300 mesh grids coated with formvar. Following incubation, samples were briefly washed twice with deionized water then negatively stained with 2% aqueous uranyl acetate. Transmission electron microscopy was performed with a Phillips CM-12 microscope, and images were acquired with a Gatan model 791 CCD camera.

viii. Statistical Analysis

The significance of vaccine treatments and virus neutralization was measured by non-parametric Mann-Whitney test using GraphPad prism software. Two stars (**) indicates p values <0.05. Three stars (***) indicates p values <0.001.

b. Design and Expression of HBc VLPs and RIC Displaying HPV16 L2

BeYDV plant expression vectors (FIG. 3) expressing either the target VLP HBche-L2, or L2 and HBche alone as controls, were agroinfiltrated into the leaves of N. benthamiana and analyzed for VLP production. After 4-5 days post infiltration (DPI), leaves displayed only minor signs of tissue necrosis, indicating that the VLP was well-tolerated by the plants (FIG. 4A). Leaf extracts analyzed by reducing SDS-PAGE showed an abundant band near the predicted size of 51 kDa for HBche-L2, just above the large subunit of rubisco (RbcL). HBche was detected around the predicted size of 38 kDa (FIG. 4B). Western blot probed with anti-L2 polyclonal serum detected a band for HBche-L2 at ˜51 kDa (FIG. 4B). These results indicate that this plant system is capable of producing high levels of L2-containing HBc VLP.

To express L2-containing MC, amino acids 14-122 of HPV16 L2 were fused with linker to the C-terminus of the 6D8 antibody heavy chain and tagged with the 6D8 epitope (Kim et al. 2015). A BeYDV vector (FIG. 3) expressing both the L2-fused 6D8 heavy chain and the light chain was agroinfiltrated into leaves of N. benthamiana and analyzed for RIC production. To create more homogenous human-type glycosylation, which has been shown to improve antibody Fc receptor binding in vivo, transgenic plants silenced for xylosyltransferase and fucosyltransferase were employed (Castilho and Steinkellner 2012). By western blot, high molecular weight bands >150 kDa suggestive of RIC formation were observed (FIG. 4C). Expression of soluble L2 RIC was lower than HBche-L2 due to relatively poor solubility of the RIC (FIG. 4C).

After rigorous genetic optimization, the N. benthamiana system is capable of producing very high levels of recombinant protein, up to 30-50% of the total soluble plant protein, in 4-5 days (Diamos et al. 2016). Using this system, we produced and purified milligram quantities of fully assembled and potently immunogenic HBc VLPs displaying HPV L2 through a simple one-step purification process (FIGS. 4A-4C and 6).

c. Purification and Characterization of HBche-L2 and L2 RIC

To assess the assembly of HBc-L2 VLP, clarified plant extracts containing either HBche-L2 or HBche were analyzed by sucrose gradient sedimentation. HBche-L2 sedimented largely with HBche, which is known to form VLP, though a small increase in density was observed with HBche-L2, perhaps due to the incorporation of L2 into the virus particle (FIG. 5A). To demonstrate particle formation, sucrose fractions were examined by electron microscopy. Both HBche and HBche-L2 formed ˜30 nm particles, although the appearance of HBche-L2 VLP suggested slightly larger, fuller particles (FIGS. 5C and 5D). As most plant proteins do not sediment with VLP, pooling peak sucrose fractions resulted in >95% pure HBche-L2 (FIG. 5B), yielding sufficient antigen (>3 mg) for vaccination from a single plant leaf.

L2 RIC was purified from plant tissue by protein G affinity chromatography. By SDS-PAGE, an appropriately sized band was visible >150 kDa that was highly pure (FIG. 5B). Western blot confirmed the presence of L2 in this band, indicating proper RIC formation (FIG. 5B). L2 RIC bound to human complement C1q receptor with substantially higher affinity compared to free human IgG standard, suggesting proper immune complex formation (FIG. 5E).

d. Mouse Immunization with HBche-L2 and L2 RIC

Groups of Balb/c mice (n=8) were immunized, using alum as adjuvant, with three doses each of 5 μg L2 delivered as either L2 alone, HBche-L2 VLP, L2 RIC, or a combination of half VLP and half RIC. VLP and RIC, alone or combined, greatly enhanced antibody titers compared to L2 alone by more than an order of magnitude at all time points tested (FIG. 6). After one or two doses, the combined VLP/RIC treatment group outperformed both the VLP or RIC groups, reaching mean endpoint titers of >200,000, which represent a 700-fold increase over immunization with L2 alone (FIG. 6). After the third dose, both the VLP and combined VLP/RIC groups reached endpoint titers >1,300,000, a 2-fold increase over the RIC alone group. To determine the antibody subtypes produced by each treatment group, sera were assayed for L2-binding IgG1 and IgG2a. All four groups produced predominately IgG1 (FIG. 7, note dilutions). However, RIC and especially VLP-containing groups had an elevated ratio of IgG2a:IgG1 (>3-fold) compared to L2 alone (FIG. 7).

In vitro neutralization of HPV16 pseudovirions showed that the VLP and RIC groups greatly enhanced neutralization compared to L2 alone (FIG. 5, p<0.001). Additionally, VLP and RIC combined further enhanced neutralization activity ($5-fold, p<0.05) compared to either antigen alone, supporting the strong synergistic effect of delivering L2 by both platforms simultaneously.

In this study, by displaying amino acids 11-128 on the surface of plant-produced HBc VLPs, L2 antibody titers as high as those seen with L1 vaccines were generated (FIG. 6). Mice immunized with L2 alone had highly variable antibody titers, with titers spanning two orders of magnitude. By contrast, the other groups had much more homogenous antibody responses, especially the VLP-containing groups, which had no animals below an endpoint titer of 1:1,000,000 (FIG. 6). These results underscore the potential of HBc VLP and RIC to provide consistently potent immune responses against L2. Moreover, significant synergy of VLP and RIC systems was observed when the systems were delivered together, after one or two doses (FIG. 6). Since equivalent amounts of L2 were delivered with each dose, the enhanced antibody titer did not result from higher L2 doses. Rather, these data suggest that higher L2-specific antibody production may be due to augmented stimulation of L2-specific B cells by T-helper cells that were primed by RIC-induced antigen presenting cells. Although treatment with VLP and RIC alone reached similar endpoint titers as the combined VLP/RIC group after 3 doses, virus neutralization was substantially higher (>5-fold) in the combined group (FIG. 8). Together, these data indicate unique synergy exists when VLP and RIC are delivered together. Inventors have observed similarly significant synergistic enhancement of immunogenicity for a variety of other antigens.

Mice immunized with L2 alone had highly variable antibody titers, with titers spanning two orders of magnitude. By contrast, the VLP and VLP/RIC groups had much more homogenous antibody responses, with no animals below an endpoint titer of 1:1,000,000 (FIG. 6). These results underscore the potential of HBc VLP and RIC to provide consistently potent immune responses against L2.

Fc gamma receptors are present on immune cells and strongly impact antibody effector functions such as antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity and complement-dependent cytotoxicity (Jefferis 2009). In mice, these interactions are controlled in part by IgG subtypes. IgG1 is associated with a Th2 response and has limited effector functions. By contrast, IgG2a is associated with a Th1 response and more strongly binds complement components (Neuberger and Raj ewsky 1981) and Fc receptors (Radaev 2002), enhancing effector functions and opsonophagocytosis by macrophages (Takai et al. 1994). Immunization with L2 alone was found to produce low levels of IgG2a, however immunization with RIC and VLP produced significant increases in IgG2a titers. VLP-containing groups in particular showed a 3-fold increase in the ratio of IgG2a to IgG1 antibodies (FIG. 7). Importantly, production of IgG2a is associated with successful clearance of a plethora of viral pathogens (Coutelier et al. 1988; Gerhard et al. 1997; Wilson et al. 2000; Markine-Goriaynoff and Coutelier 2002).

The glycosylation state of the Fc receptor also plays an important role in antibody function. Advances in glycoengineering have led to the development of transgenic plants with silenced fucosyl- and xylosyl-transferase genes capable of producing recombinant proteins with authentic human N-glycosylation (Strasser et al. 2008). Antibodies produced in this manner have more homogenous glycoforms, resulting in improved interaction with Fc gamma and complement receptors compared to the otherwise identical antibodies produced in mammalian cell culture systems (Zeitlin et al. 2011; Hiatt et al. 2014; Strasser et al. 2014; Marusic et al. 2017). As the known mechanisms by which RIC vaccines increase immunogenicity of an antigen depend in part on Fc and complement receptor binding, HPV L2 RIC were produced in transgenic plants with silenced fucosyl- and xylosyl-transferase. Consistent with these data, we found that L2 RIC strongly enhanced the immunogenicity of L2 (FIG. 6). However, yield suffered from insolubility of the RIC (FIG. 4C). We found that the 11-128 segment of L2 expresses very poorly on its own in plants and may be a contributing factor to poor L2 RIC yield. Importantly, we have produced very high yields of RIC with different antigen fusions. Thus, in some aspects, antibody fusion with a shorter segment of L2 could substantially improve the yield of L2 RIC.

e. Neutralization of HPV Pseudovirions

Neutralization of papilloma pseudoviruses (HPV 16, 18, and 58) with sera from mice immunized IP with HBc-L2 VLP and L2(11-128) showed neutralization of HPV 16 at titers of 400-1600 and 200-800, respectively (Table 1). More mice IP-immunized with HBc-L2 VLP had antisera that cross-neutralized HPV 18 and HPV 58 pseudoviruses, compared with mice immunized with L2(11-128). Anti-HBc-L2 VLP sera neutralized HPV 18 at titers of 400 and HPV 58 at titers ranging from 400-800 (Table 1), while anti-L2(11-128) sera neutralized HPV 18 at a titer of 200 and HPV 58 at a titer of 400 (Table 1). None of the sera from intranasal-immunized mice demonstrated neutralizing activity, consistent with lower anti-L2 titers for intranasal than for intraperitoneal immunized mice.

TABLE 1
L2-specific serum IgG and pseudovirus neutralization
titers from IP immunized mice
Neutralization of Pseudoviruses
ImmunogenSerum IgGHPV 16HPV 18HPV 58
HBc-L2>50,000 400
~70,0001600400400
>80,0001600400800
L2 (11-128)~8000 200
~12,000 400
~50,000 800200400

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Patent 2024
3' Untranslated Regions 5' Untranslated Regions AA 149 Agrobacterium tumefaciens aluminum potassium sulfate aluminum sulfate Amino Acids Animals Animals, Transgenic Antibodies Antibody Formation Antigen-Presenting Cells Antigens B-Lymphocytes Bacteria Bromphenol Blue Buffers Cell Culture Techniques Cells Centrifugation Chromatography, Affinity Cloning Vectors Cold Temperature Combined Modality Therapy complement 1q receptor Complement Receptor Complex, Immune Complex Extracts Cytotoxicities, Antibody-Dependent Cell Cytotoxin Digestion DNA, A-Form DNA Sequence Edetic Acid Electron Microscopy Electroporation Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay Epitopes ethane sulfonate Fc Receptor Females Formvar Fucosyltransferase G-substrate Gamma Rays Genes Genes, vif Glycerin Goat Helix (Snails) Helper-Inducer T-Lymphocyte Homo sapiens Homozygote Horseradish Peroxidase Human papillomavirus 16 Human papillomavirus 18 Human Papilloma Virus Vaccine IGG-horseradish peroxidase IgG1 IgG2A Immune Sera Immunoglobulin Heavy Chains Immunoglobulins Immunologic Factors Institutional Animal Care and Use Committees Introns Inventors L2 protein, Human papillomavirus type 16 Light Macrophage Mammals Matrix Attachment Regions Mice, Inbred BALB C Microscopy Milk, Cow's Morpholinos Mus Necrosis Needles Nicotiana Oligonucleotide Primers Oligonucleotides Open Reading Frames Opsonophagocytosis Papilloma Pathogenicity Plant Development Plant Extracts Plant Leaves Plant Proteins Plants Plants, Transgenic polyacrylamide gels Polystyrenes polyvinylidene fluoride prisma Protein Glycosylation Proteins Punctures Rabbits Receptors, IgG Recombinant Proteins Replicon Reproduction Response, Immune Ribulose-Bisphosphate Carboxylase Large Subunit Satellite Viruses SDS-PAGE Serum Serum Albumin, Bovine Sodium Ascorbate Sodium Chloride sodium phosphate Specimen Collection Stars, Celestial Strains Sucrose Sulfate, Magnesium Syringes System, Immune Technique, Dilution Tissue, Membrane Tissues Transferase Transmission Electron Microscopy Triton X-100 Tromethamine Tween 20 Ultraviolet Rays uranyl acetate Vaccination Vaccines Vaccines, Recombinant Virion Viroids Virus Vision Western Blotting xylosyltransferase

Example 1

During the sample preparation the HCMV fusion inhibitor (compound 28 described in Bloom et al., Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters 14 (2004) 3401-3406; see also FIG. 5D) was added to each step during the virus concentration, processing, extraction and purification to inhibit conversion of gB to the postfusion form.

Following crosslinking of the proteins on the virion surface with bis(sulfosuccinimidyl) glutarate (BS2G) and extraction of gB from the virion with detergent, the SM5-1 His/Strep-tagged Fab (Potzsch et al., PLoS pathogens 7(8):e1002172, 2011) was added to assist in purification and identification of gB by electron cryomicroscopy. The Fab-gB complexes were purified by an affinity column.

These extracted and purified proteins were then analyzed by electron cryomicroscopy for the presence of prefusion gB and used to solve the structure of a prefusion form.

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Patent 2024
Cardiac Arrest Cryoelectron Microscopy Detergents Glutarate Human Herpesvirus 5 isolation Pathogenicity Proteins Strains Virion Virus

Example 4

To evaluate the cellular immunogenicity of the novel engineered adenoviral vector Ad4Ptr13-BB21, Balb/C mice were immunized intramuscularly with Ad4Ptr13-BB21, Ad26 (positive control), or Ad4 (parental vector of Ad4Ptr13-BB21), each expressing Firefly luciferase (Fluc), or with an adenovector not encoding a transgene, Ad26 empty. Two vector doses were tested for administration: 109 and 1010 viral particles (vp) per mouse. At two weeks after immunization, mice were sacrificed and splenocytes were isolated, according to the same experimental setup as used for BB21.Fluc and BB24.Fluc (FIG. 1A). Cellular immune responses were determined by ex-vivo ELISPOT assay measuring the relative number of IFN-γ-secreting cells after overnight splenocyte stimulation with a 15mer overlapping FLuc peptide pool (FIG. 2). The results show that at the higher-dose immunization (1010), the cellular immune response induced by Ad4Ptr13-BB21.FLuc was about as high as that seen for the benchmark control vector Ad26.Fluc, while at the lower-dose immunization (109), Ad4Ptr13-BB21.FLuc gave a slightly higher response than Ad26.Fluc.

Overall, the cellular immune responses induced by the FLuc-expressing, novel engineered Ad4Ptr13-BB21 adenoviral vector, which comprises a BB21 fiber variant (SEQ ID NO:3), clearly indicate potent immunogenicity of this vector in mice.

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Patent 2024
Adenoviruses Antigens Biological Assay Cells Cellular Immune Response Cloning Vectors Enzyme-Linked Immunospot Assay Fibrosis Interferon Type II Luciferases, Firefly Mice, Inbred BALB C Mus Parent Peptides Transgenes Vaccination Virion Vision

Example 10

CFSM was initially applied to virus-free cell cultures to determine the concentration of CFSM that could be used on FRhK cells without itself causing any detrimental effects on the cells. In FIGS. 17A and 17B, it can be seen that 2% CFSM is a desirable amount to use and this amount was used for subsequent experiments.

Next, viral particles in infected RAW 264.7 cells and media in the presence of probiotic CFSM were quantified. Mouse macrophage RAW 264.7 cells were infected with MNV-1 at 1×106 cells with 3.5×106 PFU. After RNA extraction from cells and media (supernatant), quantification of MNV-1 particles was done by a 2-step real-time PCR. The analysis showed a statistical difference (t-test, p<0.05) between the amounts of viral particles present in the media (FIG. 18, panel B) compared to untreated infected cells. For the number of viral particles inside the cells, only Lactococcus lactis and Lactobacillus reuteri (FIG. 18, panel A), showed a statistical difference compared to infected cells, however, Lactobacillus acidophilus La-5 showed a trend towards statistical significance. These results show that the propagation of MNV-1 might be negatively affected by the presence of bioactive compounds produced by probiotic strains.

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Patent 2024
Cells Lactobacillus acidophilus Lactobacillus reuteri Lactococcus lactis Macrophage Mus Norovirus Infection Probiotics RAW 264.7 Cells Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction Strains Virion Virus Vision

Example 5

To deliver the albumin-specific ZFNs to the liver in vivo, the normal site of albumin production, we generated a hepatotropic adeno-associated virus vector, serotype 8 expressing the albumin-specific ZFNs from a liver-specific enhancer and promoter (Shen et al., ibid and Miao et al., ibid). Adult C57BL/6 mice were subjected to genome editing at the albumin gene as follows: adult mice were treated by i.v. (intravenous) injection with 1×1011 v.g. (viral genomes)/mouse of either ZFN pair 1 (SBS 30724 and SBS 30725), or ZFN pair 2 (SBS 30872 and SBS 30873) and sacrificed seven days later. The region of the albumin gene encompassing the target site for pair 1 was amplified by PCR for the Cel-I mismatch assay using the following 2 PCR primers:

Cel1 F1:
(SEQ ID NO: 69)
5′ CCTGCTCGACCATGCTATACT 3′
Cel1 R1:
(SEQ ID NO: 70)
5′ CAGGCCTTTGAAATGTTGTTC 3′

The region of the albumin gene encompassing the target site for pair 2 was amplified by PCR for the Cel-I assay using these PCR primers:

mAlb set4F4:
(SEQ ID NO: 71)
5′ AAGTGCAAAGCCTTTCAGGA 3′
mAlb set4R4:
(SEQ ID NO: 72)
5′ GTGTCCTTGTCAGCAGCCTT 3′

As shown in FIG. 4, the ZFNs induce indels in up to 17% of their target sites in vivo in this study.

The mouse albumin specific ZFNs SBS30724 and SBS30725 which target a sequence in intron 1 were also tested in a second study. Genes for expressing the ZFNs were introduced into an AAV2/8 vector as described previously (Li et al. (2011) Nature 475 (7355): 217). To facilitate AAV production in the baculovirus system, a baculovirus containing a chimeric serotype 8.2 capsid gene was used. Serotype 8.2 capsid differs from serotype 8 capsid in that the phopholipase A2 domain in capsid protein VP1 of AAV8 has been replaced by the comparable domain from the AAV2 capsid creating a chimeric capsid. Production of the ZFN containing virus particles was done either by preparation using a HEK293 system or a baculovirus system using standard methods in the art (See Li et al., ibid, see e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 6,723,551). The virus particles were then administered to normal male mice (n=6) using a single dose of 200 microliter of 1.0el 1 total vector genomes of either AAV2/8 or AAV2/8.2 encoding the mouse albumin-specific ZFN. 14 days post administration of rAAV vectors, mice were sacrificed, livers harvested and processed for DNA or total proteins using standard methods known in the art. Detection of AAV vector genome copies was performed by quantitative PCR. Briefly, qPCR primers were made specific to the bGHpA sequences within the AAV as follows:

Oligo200 (Forward)
(SEQ ID NO: 102)
5′-GTTGCCAGCCATCTGTTGTTT-3′
Oligo201 (Reverse)
(SEQ ID NO: 103)
5′-GACAGTGGGAGTGGCACCTT-3′
Oligo202 (Probe)
(SEQ ID NO: 104)
5′-CTCCCCCGTGCCTTCCTTGACC-3′

Cleavage activity of the ZFN was measured using a Cel-I assay performed using a LC-GX apparatus (Perkin Elmer), according to manufacturer's protocol. Expression of the ZFNs in vivo was measured using a FLAG-Tag system according to standard methods.

As shown in FIG. 5 (for each mouse in the study) the ZFNs were expressed, and cleave the target in the mouse liver gene. The % indels generated in each mouse sample is provided at the bottom of each lane. The type of vector and their contents are shown above the lanes. Mismatch repair following ZFN cleavage (indicated % indels) was detected at nearly 16% in some of the mice.

The mouse specific albumin ZFNs were also tested for in vivo activity when delivered via use of a variety of AAV serotypes including AAV2/5, AAV2/6, AAV2/8 and AAV2/8.2. In these AAV vectors, all the ZFN encoding sequence is flanked by the AAV2 ITRs, contain, and then encapsulated using capsid proteins from AAV5, 6, or 8, respectively. The 8.2 designation is the same as described above. The SBS30724 and SBS30725 ZFNs were cloned into the AAV as described previously (Li et al., ibid), and the viral particles were produced either using baculovirus or a HEK293 transient transfection purification as described above. Dosing was done in normal mice in a volume of 200 μL per mouse via tail injection, at doses from 5e10 to 1e12 vg per dose. Viral genomes per diploid mouse genome were analyzed at days 14, and are analyzed at days 30 and 60. In addition, ZFN directed cleavage of the albumin locus was analyzed by Cel-I assay as described previously at day 14 and is analyzed at days 30 and 60.

As shown in FIG. 6, cleavage was observed at a level of up to 21% indels. Also included in Figure are the samples from the previous study as a comparison (far right, “mini-mouse” study-D14 and a background band (“unspecific band”).

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Patent 2024
Adult Albumins Baculoviridae Biological Assay Capsid Proteins Chimera Cloning Vectors Cytokinesis Dependovirus Diploidy Genes Genome INDEL Mutation Introns Liver Males Mice, Inbred C57BL Mismatch Repair Mus Oligonucleotide Primers Protein Domain Proteins Tail Transfection Transients Viral Genome Virion

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More about "Virion"

Virions are the complete, infectious form of a virus, consisting of genetic material (DNA or RNA) and a protein coat.
These viral particles are responsible for transmitting the virus from one host to another, making them a crucial area of study.
Understanding the structure, composition, and behavior of virions is essential for developing effective antiviral treatments and preventive measures.
Virion research often utilizes tools and reagents like Polybrene, Lipofectamine 2000, Puromycin, PMD2.G, PsPAX2, Lipofectamine 3000, FBS, and Opti-MEM to study viral infection, transduction, and gene delivery.
Polybrene, for example, is a cationic polymer that enhances the efficiency of viral transduction, while Lipofectamine 2000 and Lipofectamine 3000 are lipid-based transfection reagents commonly used for introducing genetic material into cells.
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