Harnessing endogenous miRNAs to control virus tissue tropism as a strategy for developing attenuated virus vaccines.
Cell Host Microbe. 2008 Sep 11; 4(3):239-48
Cell Host Microbe. 2008 Sep 11; 4(3):239-48
Grant McFadden, University of Florida, FL, USA. F1000 Microbiology
25 Sep 2008 | New Finding
This paper is interesting and provocative because it offers a new and clever strategy with microRNA to create live attenuated vaccines for pathogenic viruses.
In this case, the authors have constructed variants of poliovirus that express cellular microRNA that render the virus unable to compete replicatively in neuronal tissues.
The virus is thus attenuated but still generates a protective immune response that makes it an interesting new candidate model for a live vaccine against a neurovirulent virus.
McFadden G: "This paper is interesting and provocative because it offers a new and clever strategy with..." Evaluation of: [Barnes D et al. Harnessing endogenous miRNAs to control virus tissue tropism as a strategy for developing attenuated virus vaccines. Cell Host Microbe. 2008 Sep 11; 4(3):239-48; doi: 10.1016/j.chom.2008.08.003]. Faculty of 1000, 25 Sep 2008. F1000.com/1120915#eval577182
Short form
McFadden G: 2008. F1000.com/1120915#eval577182
Faculty of 1000 evaluations, dissents and comments for [Barnes D et al. Harnessing endogenous miRNAs to control virus tissue tropism as a strategy for developing attenuated virus vaccines. Cell Host Microbe. 2008 Sep 11; 4(3):239-48; doi: 10.1016/j.chom.2008.08.003]. Faculty of 1000, 25 Sep 2008. F1000.com/1120915
Short form
Faculty of 1000: 2008. F1000.com/1120915
Live attenuated vaccines remain the safest, most cost-effective intervention against viral infections. Because live vaccine strains are generated empirically and the basis for attenuation is usually ill defined, many important viruses lack an efficient live vaccine. Here, we present a general strategy for the rational design of safe and effective live vaccines that harnesses the microRNA-based gene-silencing machinery to control viral replication. Using poliovirus as a model, we demonstrate that insertion of small miRNA homology sequences into a viral genome can restrict its tissue tropism, thereby preventing pathogenicity and yielding an attenuated viral strain. Poliovirus strains engineered to become targets of neuronal-specific miRNAs lost their ability to replicate in the central nervous system, leading to significant attenuation of neurovirulence in infected animals. Importantly, these viruses retained the ability to replicate in nonneuronal tissues. As a result, these engineered miRNA-regulated viruses elicited strong protective immunity in mice without producing disease.
DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2008.08.003
PMID: 18779050
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