AI Article Synopsis

  • The Department of Defense is working on standardizing virus challenge materials and testing strategies for vaccines and therapeutics, aiming to meet FDA regulations that allow for animal efficacy data when human data is unavailable.
  • They created cDNA clones of human infection-derived strains of alphaviruses (like Venezuelan, eastern, and western equine encephalitis viruses) to study their virulence and develop reporter vectors for replication characteristics.
  • The study involved comparing these newly created viruses with existing strains to remove artifacts from cell culture and finding mutations that affected virulence, ultimately confirming that the new cDNA-derived viruses had similar effects in mouse models as previous strains.

Article Abstract

The Department of Defense recently began an effort to improve and standardize virus challenge materials and efficacy determination strategies for testing therapeutics and vaccines. This includes stabilization of virus genome sequences in cDNA form where appropriate, use of human-derived virus isolates, and noninvasive strategies for determination of challenge virus replication. Eventually, it is desired that these approaches will satisfy the FDA "Animal Rule" for licensure, which substitutes animal efficacy data when human data are unlikely to be available. To this end, we created and examined the virulence phenotype of cDNA clones of prototypic human infection-derived strains of the alphaviruses, Venezuelan (VEEV INH9813), eastern (EEEV V105) and western (WEEV Fleming) equine encephalitis viruses, and created fluorescent and luminescent reporter expression vectors for evaluation of replication characteristics in vitro and in vivo. Sequences of minimally passaged isolates of each virus were used to synthesize full-length cDNA clones along with a T7 transcription promoter-based bacterial propagation vector. Viruses generated from the cDNA clones were compared with other "wild type" strains derived from cDNA clones and GenBank sequences to identify and eliminate putative tissue culture artifacts accumulated in the cell passaged biological stocks. This was followed by examination of aerosol and subcutaneous infection and disease in mouse models. A mutation that increased heparan sulfate binding was identified in the VEEV INH9813 biological isolate sequence and eliminated from the cDNA clone. Viruses derived from the new human isolate cDNA clones showed similar mouse virulence to existing clone-derived viruses after aerosol or subcutaneous inoculation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9862562PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v15010005DOI Listing

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