A Full-Length Infectious cDNA Clone of Zika Virus from the 2015 Epidemic in Brazil as a Genetic Platform for Studies of Virus-Host Interactions and Vaccine Development

Description:
An arthropod-borne virus, Zika virus (ZIKV), has recently emerged as a major human pathogen. Associated with complications during perinatal development and Guillain-Barré syndrome in adults, ZIKV raises new challenges for understanding the molecular determinants of flavivirus pathogenesis. This underscores the necessity for the development of a reverse genetic system based on an epidemic ZIKV strain. This technology relates to the generation and characterization in cell cultures of an infectious cDNA clone of ZIKV isolated from the 2015 epidemic in Brazil. The cDNA-derived ZIKV replicated efficiently in a variety of cell lines, including those of both neuronal and placental origin. It was observed that the growth of cDNA-derived virus was attenuated compared to the growth of the parental isolate in most cell lines, which correlates with substantial differences in sequence heterogeneity between these viruses that were determined by deep-sequencing analysis. Moreover, these results indicate that caution should be exercised when interpreting the results of reverse-genetics experiments in attempts to accurately predict the biology of natural viruses. Finally, a Vero cell-adapted cDNA clone of ZIKV was generated that can be used as a convenient platform for studies aimed at the development of ZIKV vaccines (live attenuated and inactivated) and therapeutics.
Patent Information:
For Information, Contact:
Peter Soukas
Technology Licensing Specialist/TTPS
NIH Technology Transfer
301-496-2644
peter.soukas@nih.gov
Inventors:
Konstantin Tsetsarkin
Alexander Pletnev
Keywords:
2015
Brazil
cDNA
CLONE
DAXXXX
DBXXXX
DC5BXX
DC5XXX
DC6XXX
DCXXXX
DD1XXX
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Development
DXXXXX
Epidemic
FULL-LENGTH
Genetic
INFECTIOUS
INTERACTIONS
PLATFORM
STUDIES
Vaccine
virus
Virus-Host
Zika
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