衣壳
五聚体
口蹄疫病毒
病毒学
病毒
中和抗体
重组DNA
生物
化学
遗传学
基因
生物化学
作者
Abhay Kotecha,Julian Seago,Katherine Scott,Alison Burman,Silvia Loureiro,Jingshan Ren,Claudine Porta,Helen M. Ginn,Terry Jackson,Eva Pérez-Martín,C. Alistair Siebert,Guntram Paul,Juha T. Huiskonen,Ian M. Jones,Robert Esnouf,Elizabeth E. Fry,Francois F. Maree,Bryan Charleston,David I. Stuart
摘要
Virus capsids are primed for disassembly, yet capsid integrity is key to generating a protective immune response. Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) capsids comprise identical pentameric protein subunits held together by tenuous noncovalent interactions and are often unstable. Chemically inactivated or recombinant empty capsids, which could form the basis of future vaccines, are even less stable than live virus. Here we devised a computational method to assess the relative stability of protein-protein interfaces and used it to design improved candidate vaccines for two poorly stable, but globally important, serotypes of FMDV: O and SAT2. We used a restrained molecular dynamics strategy to rank mutations predicted to strengthen the pentamer interfaces and applied the results to produce stabilized capsids. Structural analyses and stability assays confirmed the predictions, and vaccinated animals generated improved neutralizing-antibody responses to stabilized particles compared to parental viruses and wild-type capsids.
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