Literature detail

Establishment of a Nipah virus rescue system.

Misako Yoneda1 Vanessa Guillaume Fusako Ikeda Yuki Sakuma Hiroki Sato T Fabian Wild Chieko Kai
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Laboratory Animal Research Center and International Research Center for Infectious Diseases, Institute of Medical Science, University of Tokyo, 4-6-1 Shirokanedai, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108-8639, Japan.
PMID 17053073 2006 Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

Nipah virus (NiV), a paramyxovirus, was first discovered in Malaysia in 1998 in an outbreak of infection in pigs and humans and incurred a high fatality rate in humans. Fruit bats, living in vast areas extending from India to the western Pacific, were identified as the natural reservoir of the virus. However, the mechanisms that resulted in severe pathogenicity in humans (up to 70% mortality) and that enabled crossing the species barrier were not known. In this study, we established a system that enabled the rescue of replicating NiVs from a cloned DNA by cotransfection of a constructed full-length cDNA clone and supporting plasmids coding virus nucleoprotein, phosphoprotein, and polymerase with the infection of the recombinant vaccinia virus, MVAGKT7, expressing T7 RNA polymerase. The rescued NiV (rNiV), by using the newly developed reverse genetics system, showed properties in vitro that were similar to the parent virus and retained the severe pathogenicity in a previously established animal model by experimental infection. A recombinant NiV was also developed, expressing enhanced green fluorescent protein (rNiV-EGFP). Using the virus, permissibility of NiV was compared with the presence of a known cellular receptor, ephrin B2, in a number of cell lines of different origins. Interestingly, two cell lines expressing ephrin B2 were not susceptible for rNiV-EGFP, indicating that additional factors are clearly required for full NiV replication. The reverse genetics for NiV will provide a powerful tool for the analysis of the molecular mechanisms of pathogenicity and cross-species infection.

Animals Cell Line Chlorocebus aethiops Cricetinae Ephrin-B2 Henipavirus Infections Humans Nipah Virus Plasmids Rats Recombinant Proteins Survival Rate Virus Replication

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Recombinant Nipah virus replicated similarly to the parent virus in vitro and retained pathogenicity in an animal infection model; susceptibility varied across cell lines expressing ephrin B2, showing that additional factors are required for full viral replication.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

The rescued NiV (rNiV), by using the newly developed reverse genetics system, showed properties in vitro that were similar to the parent virus and retained the severe pathogenicity in a previously established animal model by experimental infection. Using the virus, permissibility of NiV was compared with the presence of a known cellular receptor, ephrin B2, in a number of cell lines of different origins.

Method
reverse genetics; experimental infection; cell permissibility assay
Experimental system
in vitro cell culture
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.60
Key finding

Ephrin B2 expression alone does not confer susceptibility to Nipah virus infection, suggesting other host factors are required for complete viral replication.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Using the recombinant virus, permissibility of NiV was compared with the presence of a known cellular receptor, ephrin B2, in a number of cell lines of different origins. Two cell lines expressing ephrin B2 were not susceptible for rNiV-EGFP, indicating that additional factors are clearly required for full NiV replication.

Genes or proteins
ephrin B2
Receptors
ephrin B2
Mechanism types
receptor_binding; replication_efficiency; host_factor_interaction
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Ephrin B2 was identified as a known cellular receptor for Nipah virus, but its expression alone was insufficient to permit infection, indicating that other host factors are necessary for complete viral replication.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Using the virus, permissibility of NiV was compared with the presence of a known cellular receptor, ephrin B2, in a number of cell lines of different origins. Interestingly, two cell lines expressing ephrin B2 were not susceptible for rNiV-EGFP, indicating that additional factors are clearly required for full NiV replication.

Method
reverse genetics system; recombinant virus infection assay
Receptors
ephrin B2