Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The nonpathogenic phenotype of the live rabies virus (RV) vaccine SPBNGAN is determined by an Arg-->Glu exchange at position 333 in the glycoprotein, designated
GAN
. We recently showed that after several passages of SPBNGAN in mice, an Asn-->Lys mutation arose at position 194 of
GAN
, resulting in GAK, which was associated with a reversion to the pathogenic phenotype. Because an RV vaccine candidate containing two
GAN
genes (SPBNGAN-
GAN
) exhibits increased immunogenicity in vivo compared to the single-
GAN
construct, we tested whether the presence of two
GAN
genes might also enhance the probability of reversion to pathogenicity. Comparison of SPBNGAN-
GAN
with RVs constructed to contain either both
GAN
and GAK genes (SPBNGAN-GAK and SPBNGAK-
GAN
) or two GAK genes (SPBNGAK-GAK) showed that while SPBNGAK-GAK was pathogenic, SPBNGAN-
GAN
and SPBNGAN-GAK were completely nonpathogenic and SPBNGAK-
GAN
showed strongly reduced pathogenicity. Analysis of genomic RV RNA in mouse brain tissue revealed significantly lower virus loads in SPBNGAN-GAK- and SPBNGAK-
GAN
-infected brains than those detected in SPBNGAK-GAK-infected brains, indicating the dominance of the nonpathogenic phenotype determined by
GAN
over the GAK-associated pathogenic phenotype. Virus production and viral RNA synthesis were markedly higher in SPBNGAN-, SPBNGAK-
GAN
-, and SPBNGAN-GAK-infected
neuroblastoma
cells than in the SPBNGAK- and SPBNGAK-GAK-infected counterparts, suggesting control of
GAN
dominance at the level of viral RNA synthesis. These data point to the lower risk of reversion to pathogenicity of a recombinant RV carrying two identical
GAN
genes compared to that of an RV carrying only a single
GAN
gene.
...
PMID:Dominance of a nonpathogenic glycoprotein gene over a pathogenic glycoprotein gene in rabies virus. 1745 37