Author: Dobrica, Mihaelaâ€Olivia; van Eerde, André; Tucureanu, Catalin; Onu, Adrian; Paruch, Lisa; Caras, Iuliana; Vlase, Ene; Steen, Hege; Haugslien, Sissel; Alonzi, Dominic; Zitzmann, Nicole; Bock, Ralph; Dubuisson, Jean; Popescu, Costinâ€Ioan; Stavaru, Crina; Liu Clarke, Jihong; Branzaâ€Nichita, Norica
Title: Hepatitis C virus E2 envelope glycoprotein produced in Nicotiana benthamiana triggers humoral response with virusâ€neutralizing activity in vaccinated mice Cord-id: r8buaptz Document date: 2021_6_3
ID: r8buaptz
Snippet: Chronic infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) remains a leading cause of liverâ€related pathologies and a global health problem, currently affecting more than 71 million people worldwide. The development of a prophylactic vaccine is much needed to complement the effective antiviral treatment available and achieve HCV eradication. Current strategies focus on increasing the immunogenicity of the HCV envelope glycoprotein E2, the major target of virusâ€neutralizing antibodies, by testing various
Document: Chronic infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) remains a leading cause of liverâ€related pathologies and a global health problem, currently affecting more than 71 million people worldwide. The development of a prophylactic vaccine is much needed to complement the effective antiviral treatment available and achieve HCV eradication. Current strategies focus on increasing the immunogenicity of the HCV envelope glycoprotein E2, the major target of virusâ€neutralizing antibodies, by testing various expression systems or manipulating the protein conformation and the Nâ€glycosylation pattern. Here we report the first evidence of successful production of the fullâ€length HCV E2 glycoprotein in Nicotiana benthamiana, by using the Agrobacteriumâ€mediated transient expression technology. Molecular and functional analysis showed that the viral protein was correctly processed in plant cells and achieved the native folding required for binding to CD81, one of the HCV receptors. Nâ€glycan analysis of HCVâ€E2 produced in N. benthamiana and mammalian cells indicated hostâ€specific trimming of mannose residues and possibly, protein trafficking. Notably, the plantâ€derived viral antigen triggered a significant immune response in vaccinated mice, characterized by the presence of antibodies with HCVâ€neutralizing activity. Together, our study demonstrates that N. benthamiana is a viable alternative to costly mammalian cell cultures for the expression of complex viral antigens and supports the use of plants as costâ€effective production platforms for the development of HCV vaccines.
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