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Effects of the number of amino acid residues in the signal segment upstream or downstream of the NS2B-3 cleavage site on production and secretion of prM/M-E virus-like particles of West Nile virus

Authors :
Akihisa Takamizawa
Naohiro Ohtaki
Takeshi Kurata
William W. Hall
Keiko Tanaka
Michiko Tanaka
Tomohiko Takasaki
Hirofumi Sawa
Masae Maeda-Sato
Asato Kojima
Hideki Hasegawa
Hidehiro Takahashi
Toyokazu Ishikawa
Tetsutaro Sata
Source :
Microbes and infection. 11(13)
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Expression of genes for precursor M (prM) and envelope (E) proteins of West Nile virus (WNV) leads to the production of small, capsidless, and non-infectious virus-like particles (VLPs) possessing the E antigen which is responsible for viral entry and immune protection. It has been reported that processing of the secretion signal affects viral release. We examined the secretion efficiency of VLPs into the culture medium from RK13 or 293 T cells transfected with expression vectors for prM and E proteins of WNV which were constructed to comprise different lengths of signal peptides upstream of the prM-E domain. The number of amino acid residues present in the segment markedly affected the production, processing, and secretion of VLPs. Secreted VLPs possessed both the processed M protein and the glycosylated E protein. In addition, immunization with VLPs induced neutralizing antibodies in C3H/HeN mice. These results indicate that the number of amino acid residues comprising the N-terminus of the signal segment controls the efficiency of assembly, maturation, and release of VLPs in the absence of viral protease, which in turn indicates the potential of VLPs as a candidate for an effective WNV subunit vaccine.

Details

ISSN :
1769714X
Volume :
11
Issue :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Microbes and infection
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....02605d09d6c89dafcf6d144ebc35cce3