Search results for "Vesicular stomatitis Indiana virus"

showing 10 items of 25 documents

Selection for Robustness in Mutagenized RNA Viruses

2007

Mutational robustness is defined as the constancy of a phenotype in the face of deleterious mutations. Whether robustness can be directly favored by natural selection remains controversial. Theory and in silico experiments predict that, at high mutation rates, slow-replicating genotypes can potentially outcompete faster counterparts if they benefit from a higher robustness. Here, we experimentally validate this hypothesis, dubbed the ‘‘survival of the flattest,’’ using two populations of the vesicular stomatitis RNA virus. Characterization of fitness distributions and genetic variability indicated that one population showed a higher replication rate, whereas the other was more robust to mut…

0106 biological sciencesCancer ResearchMutation ratelcsh:QH426-470In silicoMolecular Sequence DataPopulationBiologyVirus Replication010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusCell Line03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineVirologyCricetinaeGeneticsAnimalsHumansSelection GeneticeducationMolecular BiologyGenetics (clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyGeneticsEvolutionary Biology0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyNatural selectionRobustness (evolution)Genetics and GenomicsRNA virusbiology.organism_classification3. Good healthlcsh:GeneticsViral replicationMutagenesisViral evolutionViruses030217 neurology & neurosurgeryResearch ArticleHeLa Cells
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Improved display of synthetic IgG-binding domains on the baculovirus surface.

2004

Improved display of foreign protein moieties in combination with beneficial alteration of the viral surface properties should be of value for targeted and enhanced gene delivery. Here, we describe a vector based on Autographa californica multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus (AcMNPV) displaying synthetic IgG-binding domains (ZZ) of protein A fused to the transmembrane anchor of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) G protein. This display vector was equipped with a GFP/EGFP expression cassette enabling fluorescent detection in both insect and mammalian cells. The virus construct displayed the biologically active fusion protein efficiently and showed increased binding capacity to IgG. As the display is …

0301 basic medicineCancer ResearchvirusesRecombinant Fusion Proteins030106 microbiologyGenetic VectorsGene deliveryBiologySpodopteraVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusViral vectorCell Line03 medical and health sciencesViral Envelope ProteinsViral entryCricetinaeAnimalsMembrane GlycoproteinsImmune SerafungiGenetic Therapybiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyFusion proteinNucleopolyhedroviruses030104 developmental biologyOncologyIgG bindingVesicular stomatitis virusImmunoglobulin Gbiology.proteinExpression cassetteBinding Sites AntibodyRabbitsProtein ABaculoviridaeTechnology in cancer researchtreatment
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Fibrinogen Gamma Chain Promotes Aggregation of Vesicular Stomatitis Virus in Saliva.

2020

This article belongs to the Section Animal Viruses.

0301 basic medicineFibrinogen-gamma chainVirologiaSalivaVirion aggregationviruses030106 microbiologyCelllcsh:QR1-502Fluorescent Antibody TechniqueViral transmissionProteomicsFibrinogenlcsh:MicrobiologyVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusArticleCell Line03 medical and health sciencesLabel-free proteomicsDownregulation and upregulationlabel-free proteomicsVirologymedicineHumansCollective infectious unitscollective infectious unitsSalivaCells CulturedbiologyChemistryviral transmissionVirionFibrinogenRNA virusbiology.organism_classificationVirus3. Good healthCell biologystomatognathic diseases030104 developmental biologyInfectious Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureVesicular stomatitis virusVesicular stomatitis virusvirion aggregationvesicular stomatitis virusVesicular Stomatitismedicine.drugViruses
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T-cell receptor transfer into human T cells with ecotropic retroviral vectors

2014

Adoptive T-cell transfer for cancer immunotherapy requires genetic modification of T cells with recombinant T-cell receptors (TCRs). Amphotropic retroviral vectors (RVs) used for TCR transduction for this purpose are considered safe in principle. Despite this, TCR-coding and packaging vectors could theoretically recombine to produce replication competent vectors (RCVs), and transduced T-cell preparations must be proven free of RCV. To eliminate the need for RCV testing, we transduced human T cells with ecotropic RVs so potential RCV would be non-infectious for human cells. We show that transfection of synthetic messenger RNA encoding murine cationic amino-acid transporter 1 (mCAT-1), the re…

CD4-Positive T-LymphocytesAdoptive cell transfermedicine.medical_treatmentGenetic enhancementGenetic VectorsReceptors Antigen T-CellCD8-Positive T-LymphocytesBiologyImmunotherapy AdoptiveJurkat cellsVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusCell LineJurkat CellsMiceTransduction (genetics)Viral Envelope ProteinsCancer immunotherapyTransduction GeneticGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansRNA MessengerMolecular BiologyCationic Amino Acid Transporter 1Membrane GlycoproteinsHEK 293 cellsT-cell receptorTransfectionAdoptive TransferVirologyElectroporationHEK293 CellsRetroviridaeLeukemia Virus Gibbon ApeMolecular MedicinePlasmidsGene Therapy
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Clonal Interference and the Evolution of RNA Viruses

1999

In asexual populations, beneficial mutations that occur in different lineages compete with one another. This phenomenon, known as clonal interference, ensures that those beneficial mutations that do achieve fixation are of large effect. Clonal interference also increases the time between fixations, thereby slowing the adaptation of asexual populations. The effects of clonal interference were measured in the asexual RNA virus vesicular stomatitis virus; rates and average effects of beneficial mutations were quantified.

GeneticsLikelihood FunctionsModels StatisticalMultidisciplinaryGenes ViralbiologyClonal interferenceRNARNA virusVirus Replicationbiology.organism_classificationAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological EvolutionModels BiologicalVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusCell LineGene FrequencyVesicular stomatitis virusCricetinaeMutationConfidence IntervalsAnimalsScience
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Is group selection a factor modulating the virulence of RNA viruses?

1997

RNA viruses consist of populations of extremely high genetic heterogeneity called quasispecies. Based on theoretical considerations, it has been suggested that the unit of selection in such complex genetic populations is not the single viral particle but a set of genetically related particles which form the quasispecies. In the present study we carried out a set of experiments with the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) dealing with the evolution of life-history characters under selection acting at two factors either in the same or in opposite directions. The two factors at which selective pressure is applied are the individual and the group. We show evidence that group selection modulates th…

GeneticsModels GeneticVirulenceGenetic heterogeneityRNAVirulenceUnit of selectionGeneral MedicineViral quasispeciesBiologybiology.organism_classificationVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusGroup selectionGenetics PopulationVesicular stomatitis virusMultivariate AnalysisGeneticsRNA VirusesSelection GeneticSelection (genetic algorithm)Genetical research
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The cost of replication fidelity in an RNA virus

2005

It is often argued that high mutation rates are advantageous for RNA viruses, because they confer elevated rates of adaptation. However, there is no direct evidence showing a positive correlation between mutation and adaptation rates among RNA viruses. Moreover, theoretical work does not argue in favor of this prediction. We used a series of vesicular stomatitis virus clones harboring single amino acid substitutions in the RNA polymerase to demonstrate that changes inducing enhanced fidelity paid a fitness cost, but that there was no positive correlation between mutation an adaptation rates. We demonstrate that the observed mutation rate in vesicular stomatitis virus can be explained by a t…

GeneticsMutation rateMultidisciplinaryAdaptation BiologicalRNARNA virusDNA-Directed RNA PolymerasesBiological SciencesBiologyVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusVirus Replicationbiology.organism_classificationVirologyVesicular stomatitis Indiana viruschemistry.chemical_compoundAmino Acid SubstitutionchemistryViral replicationVesicular stomatitis virusRNA polymeraseMutation (genetic algorithm)Mutagenesis Site-DirectedSelection GeneticProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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Epistasis and the Adaptability of an RNA Virus

2005

Abstract We have explored the patterns of fitness recovery in the vesicular stomatitis RNA virus. We show that, in our experimental setting, reversions to the wild-type genotype were rare and fitness recovery was at least partially driven by compensatory mutations. We compared compensatory adaptation for genotypes carrying (1) mutations with varying deleterious fitness effects, (2) one or two deleterious mutations, and (3) pairs of mutations showing differences in the strength and sign of epistasis. In all cases, we found that the rate of fitness recovery and the proportion of reversions were positively affected by population size. Additionally, we observed that mutations with large fitness…

GeneticsPopulation DensityMutationAnalysis of VarianceGenotypeEpistasis and functional genomicsAdaptation BiologicalRNA virusEpistasis GeneticSequence Analysis DNAViral Plaque AssayBiologyInvestigationsbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusEvolution MolecularMutational meltdownGenotypeMutationGeneticsmedicineEpistasisMutation–selection balanceAdaptation
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Following the very initial growth of biological RNA viral clones

2005

Due to their extremely high genetic diversity, which is a direct consequence of high mutation rates, RNA viruses are often described as molecular quasispecies. According to this theory, RNA virus populations cannot be understood in terms of individual viral clones, as they are clouds of interconnected mutants, but this prediction has not yet been demonstrated experimentally. The goal of this study was to determine the fitness of individual clones sampled from a given RNA virus population, a necessary previous step to test the above prediction. To do so, limiting dilutions of a vesicular stomatitis virus population were employed to isolate single viral clones and their initial growth dynamic…

Geneticseducation.field_of_studyMutation rateGenetic diversitybiologyPopulationMutantRNARNA virusViral quasispeciesbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionModels BiologicalVirologyVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusCell LineSpecies SpecificityVesicular stomatitis virusVirologyMutationAnimalsRNA ViralSelection GeneticeducationJournal of General Virology
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Repeated transfer of small RNA virus populations leading to balanced fitness with infrequent stochastic drift

1996

The population dynamics of RNA viruses have an important influence on fitness variation and, in consequence, on the adaptative potential and virulence of this ubiquitous group of pathogens. Earlier work with vesicular stomatitis virus showed that large population transfers were reproducibly associated with fitness increases, whereas repeated transfers from plaque to plaque (genetic bottlenecks) lead to losses in fitness. We demonstrate here that repeated five-plaque to five-plaque passage series yield long-term fitness stability, except for occasional stochastic fitness jumps. Repeated five-plaque passages regularly alternating with two consecutive large population transmissions did not cau…

Geneticseducation.field_of_studyVirulencebiologyPopulation DynamicsPopulationVirulenceViral Plaque AssayViral quasispeciesVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusbiology.organism_classificationVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusVirusCell LinePopulation bottleneckVesicular stomatitis virusViral evolutionGeneticsAnimalseducationMolecular BiologyMolecular and General Genetics MGG
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