Kim Young-In, DeVincenzo John P, Jones Bart G, Rudraraju Rajeev, Harrison Lisa, Meyers Rachel, Cehelsky Jeff, Alvarez Rene, Hurwitz Julia L
Department of Pediatrics, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee, United States of America; Children's Foundation Research Institute of Le Bonheur Children's Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, United States of America.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee, United States of America; Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Biochemistry, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee, United States of America; Children's Foundation Research Institute of Le Bonheur Children's Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Nov 21;9(11):e113100. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0113100. eCollection 2014.
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause of lower respiratory tract infections in children and is responsible for as many as 199,000 childhood deaths annually worldwide. To support the development of viral therapeutics and vaccines for RSV, a human adult experimental infection model has been established. In this report, we describe the provenance and sequence of RSV Memphis-37, the low-passage clinical isolate used for the model's reproducible, safe, experimental infections of healthy, adult volunteers. The predicted amino acid sequences for major proteins of Memphis-37 are compared to nine other RSV A and B amino acid sequences to examine sites of vaccine, therapeutic, and pathophysiologic interest. Human T- cell epitope sequences previously defined by in vitro studies were observed to be closely matched between Memphis-37 and the laboratory strain RSV A2. Memphis-37 sequences provide baseline data with which to assess: (i) virus heterogeneity that may be evident following virus infection/transmission, (ii) the efficacy of candidate RSV vaccines and therapeutics in the experimental infection model, and (iii) the potential emergence of escape mutants as a consequence of experimental drug treatments. Memphis-37 is a valuable tool for pre-clinical research, and to expedite the clinical development of vaccines, therapeutic immunomodulatory agents, and other antiviral drug strategies for the protection of vulnerable populations against RSV disease.
呼吸道合胞病毒(RSV)是导致儿童下呼吸道感染的主要原因,在全球范围内每年造成多达19.9万例儿童死亡。为了支持针对RSV的病毒治疗药物和疫苗的开发,已经建立了一种成人实验性感染模型。在本报告中,我们描述了RSV孟菲斯-37的来源和序列,这是一种低传代临床分离株,用于对健康成人志愿者进行该模型可重复、安全的实验性感染。将孟菲斯-37主要蛋白的预测氨基酸序列与其他9种RSV A和B的氨基酸序列进行比较,以研究疫苗、治疗和病理生理学相关位点。观察到孟菲斯-37与实验室毒株RSV A2之间,先前通过体外研究确定的人类T细胞表位序列紧密匹配。孟菲斯-37序列提供了基线数据,可用于评估:(i)病毒感染/传播后可能出现的病毒异质性;(ii)候选RSV疫苗和治疗药物在实验性感染模型中的疗效;(iii)实验性药物治疗导致逃逸突变体出现的可能性。孟菲斯-37是临床前研究的宝贵工具,有助于加快疫苗、治疗性免疫调节剂和其他抗病毒药物策略的临床开发,以保护易感人群免受RSV疾病的侵害。