Methods for making modified recombinant vesiculoviruses

Chemistry: molecular biology and microbiology – Virus or bacteriophage – except for viral vector or... – Recovery or purification

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C424S199100, C424S224100, C424S093210, C435S235100, C435S325000, C435S320100, C514S04400A, C536S023720

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06168943

ABSTRACT:

1. INTRODUCTION
The present invention relates to recombinant vesiculoviruses which are replicable and capable of expressing foreign nucleic acid contained in their genome. Also provided are inactivated forms of the recombinant viruses. The vesiculoviruses are useful in vaccine formulations to prevent or treat various diseases and disorders.
2. BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
2.1. RHABDOVIRUSES
Rhabdoviruses are membrane-enveloped viruses that are widely distributed in nature where they infect vertebrates, invertebrates, and plants. There are two distinct genera within the rhabdoviruses, the Lyssavirus genus and the Vesiculovirus genus. Rhabdoviruses have single, negative-strand RNA genomes of 11-12,000 nucleotides (Rose and Schubert, 1987, Rhabdovirus genomes and their products, in
The Viruses: The Rhabdoviruses
, Plenum Publishing Corp., NY, pp. 129-166). The virus particles contain a helical, nucleocapsid core composed of the genomic RNA and protein. Generally, three proteins, termed N (nucleocapsid, which encases the genome tightly), P (formerly termed NS, originally indicating nonstructural), and L (large) are found to be associated with the nucleocapsid. An additional matrix (M) protein lies within the membrane envelope, perhaps interacting both with the membrane and the nucleocapsid core. A single glycoprotein (G) species spans the membrane and forms the spikes on the surface of the virus particle. G is responsible for binding to cells and membrane fusion. Because the genome is the negative sense [i.e., complementary to the RNA sequence (positive sense) that functions as mRNA to directly produce encoded protein], rhabdoviruses must encode and package an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase in the virion (Baltimore et al., 1970, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 66: 572-576), composed of the P and L proteins. This enzyme transcribes genomic RNA to make subgenomic mRNAS encoding the 5-6 viral proteins and also replicates full-length positive and negative sense RNAs. The genes are transcribed sequentially, starting at the 3′ end of the genomes. The same basic genetic system is also employed by the paramyxoviruses and filoviruses.
The prototype rhabdovirus, vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), grows to very high titers in most animal cells and can be prepared in large quantities. As a result, VSV has been widely used as a model system for studying the replication and assembly of enveloped RNA viruses. The complete sequences of the VSV mRNAs and genome have been known for many years (Gallione et al. 1981, J. Virol. 39:529-535; Rose and Gallione, 1981, J. Virol. 39:519-528; Rose and Schubert, 1987, Rhabdovirus genomes and their products, p.129-166, in R. R. Wagner (ed.), The Rhabdoviruses. Plenum Publishing Corp., NY; Schubert et al., 1985, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 82:7984-7988). However, the study of VSV and related negative strand viruses has been limited by the inability to perform direct genetic manipulation of the virus using recombinant DNA technology. The difficulty in generating VSV from DNA is that neither the full-length genomic nor antigenomic RNAs are infectious. The minimal infectious unit is the genomic RNA tightly bound to 1,250 subunits of the nucleocapsid (N) protein (Thomas et al., 1985, J. Virol. 54:598-607) and smaller amounts of the two virally encoded polymerase subunits, L and P. To reconstitute infectious virus from the viral RNA, it is necessary first to assemble the N protein-RNA complex that serves as the template for transcription and replication by the VSV polymerase. Although smaller negative-strand RNA segments of the influenza virus genome can be packaged into nucleocapsids in vitro, and then rescued in influenza infected cells (Enami et al., 1990, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 87:3802-3805; Luytjes et al., 1989, Cell 59:1107-1113), systems for packaging the much larger rhabdoviral genomic RNAs in vitro are not yet available.
Recently, systems for replication and transcription of DNA-derived minigenomes or small defective RNAs from rhabdoviruses (Conzelmann and Schnell, 1994, J. Virol. 68:713-719; Pattnaik et al., 1992, Cell 69:1011-1120) and paramyxoviruses (Calain et al., 1992, Virology 191:62-71; Collins et al., 1991, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 88:9663-9667; Collins et al., 1993, Virology 195:252-256; De and Banerjee, 1993, Virology 196:344-348; Dimock and Collins, 1993, J. Virol. 67:2772-2778; Park et al., 1991, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 88:5537-5541) have been described. In these systems, RNAs are assembled into nucleocapsids within cells that express the viral N protein and polymerase proteins. Although these systems have been very useful, they do not allow genetic manipulation of the full-length genome of infectious viruses.
The recovery of rabies virus from a complete cDNA clone was published recently (Schnell et al., 1994, EMBO J. 13:4195-4203). The infectious cycle was initiated by expressing the antigenomic (full-length positive strand) RNA in cells expressing the viral N, P, and L proteins. Although rabies virus is a rhabdovirus, it is structurally and functionally different from the vesiculoviruses. Rabies virus is a Lyssavirus, not a Vesiculovirus. Lyssaviruses invade the central nervous system. Vesiculoviruses invade epithelial cells, predominantly those of the tongue, to produce vesicles. Rabies virus causes encephalitis in a variety of animals and in humans, while VSV causes an epidemic but self-limiting disease in cattle. In sharp contrast to VSV-infected cells, rabies virus produces little or no cytopathic effect in infected cell culture, replicates less efficiently than VSV in cell culture, and causes little depression of cellular DNA, RNA or protein synthesis in infected cell cultures (see Baer et al., 1990, in
Virology,
2d ed., Fields et al. (eds.), Raven Press, Ltd., NY, pp. 883, 887). Indeed, there is no cross-hybridization observed between the genomes of rabies virus and VSV, and sequence homology between the two genomes is generally discernable only with the aid of computer run homology programs. The differences between vesiculoviruses and rabies virus, and the extremely rare nature of rabies virus recovery from cDNA (~10
8
cells are transfected to yield one infectious cell), renders it unpredictable whether the strategy used with rabies virus would be successful for viruses of a different genus, i.e., the vesiculoviruses.
The recovery of infectious measles virus, another negative strand RNA virus, from cloned cDNA has been attempted, without success (see Ballart et al., 1990, EMBO J. 9(2):379-384 and the retraction thereof by Eschle et al., 1991, EMBO J. 10(11):3558).
2.2. VACCINES
The development of vaccines for the prevention of viral, bacterial, or parasitic diseases is the focus of much research effort.
Traditional ways of preparing vaccines include the use of inactivated or attenuated pathogens. A suitable inactivation of the pathogenic microorganism renders it harmless as a biological agent but does not destroy its immunogenicity. Injection of these “killed” particles into a host will then elicit an immune response capable of preventing a future infection with a live microorganism. However, a major concern in the use of killed vaccines (using inactivated pathogen) is failure to inactivate all the microorganism particles. Even when this is accomplished, since killed pathogens do not multiply in their host, or for other unknown reasons, the immunity achieved is often incomplete, short lived and requires multiple immunizations. Finally, the inactivation process may alter the microorganism's antigens, rendering them less effective as immunogens.
Attenuation refers to the production of strains of pathogenic microorganisms which have essentially lost their disease-producing ability. One way to accomplish this is to subject the microorganism to unusual growth conditions and/or frequent passage in cell culture. Mutants are then selected which have lost virulence but yet are capable of eliciting an immune response. Attenuated pathogens often make good immunogens as they actually replicate in the host cell and elicit l

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