Viruses (Mar 2021)

Stable Display of Artificially Long Foreign Antigens on Chimeric <i>Bamboo mosaic virus</i> Particles

  • Tsung-Hsien Chen,
  • Chung-Chi Hu,
  • Chin-Wei Lee,
  • Yu-Min Feng,
  • Na-Sheng Lin,
  • Yau-Heiu Hsu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v13040572
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
p. 572

Abstract

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Plant viruses can be genetically modified to generate chimeric virus particles (CVPs) carrying heterologous peptides fused on the surface of coat protein (CP) subunits as vaccine candidates. However, some factors may be especially significant in determining the properties of chimeras. In this study, peptides from various sources and of various lengths were inserted into the Bamboo mosaic virus-based (BaMV) vector CP N-terminus to examine the chimeras infecting and accumulating in plants. Interestingly, it was found that the two different strains Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) VP1 antigens with flexible linker peptides (77 or 82 amino acids) were directly expressed on the BaMV CP, and the chimeric particles self-assembled and continued to express FMDV antigens. The chimeric CP, when directly fused with a large foreign protein (117 amino acids), can self-fold into incomplete virus particles or disks. The physicochemical properties of heterologus peptides N-terminus, complex strand structures of heterologus peptides C-terminus and different flexible linker peptides, can affect the chimera accumulation. Based on these findings, using plant virus-based chimeras to express foreign proteins can increase their length limitations, and engineered plant-made CVP-based vaccines have increasing potential for further development as novel vaccines.

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