Adaptation of tick-borne encephalitis virus from human brain to different cell cultures induces multiple genomic substitutions

The C11-13 strain from the Siberian subtype of tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) was isolated from human brain using pig embryo kidney (PEK), 293, and Neuro-2a cells. Analysis of the complete viral genome of the C11-13 variants during six passages in these cells revealed that the cell-adapted C11...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of virology 2017-10, Vol.162 (10), p.3151-3156
Hauptverfasser: Ponomareva, Eugenia P., Ternovoi, Vladimir A., Mikryukova, Tamara P., Protopopova, Elena V., Gladysheva, Anastasia V., Shvalov, Alexander N., Konovalova, Svetlana N., Chausov, Eugene V., Loktev, Valery B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The C11-13 strain from the Siberian subtype of tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) was isolated from human brain using pig embryo kidney (PEK), 293, and Neuro-2a cells. Analysis of the complete viral genome of the C11-13 variants during six passages in these cells revealed that the cell-adapted C11-13 variants had multiple amino acid substitutions as compared to TBEV from human brain. Seven out of eight amino acids substitutions in the high-replicating C11-13(PEK) variant mapped to non-structural proteins; 13 out of 14 substitutions in the well-replicating C11-13(293) variant, and all four substitutions in the low-replicating C11-13(Neuro-2a) variant were also localized in non-structural proteins, predominantly in the NS2a (2), NS3 (6) and NS5 (3) proteins. The substitutions NS2a 1067 (Asn → Asp), NS2a 1168 (Leu → Val) in the N-terminus of NS2a and NS3 1745 (His → Gln) in the helicase domain of NS3 were found in all selected variants. We postulate that multiple substitutions in the NS2a, NS3 and NS5 genes play a key role in adaptation of TBEV to different cells.
ISSN:0304-8608
1432-8798
DOI:10.1007/s00705-017-3442-x