Browsing by Author "Marano, Jeffrey Matthew"
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- Development, Characterization, and Use of Molecular Tools to Study Immune-Driven Zika Virus EvolutionMarano, Jeffrey Matthew (Virginia Tech, 2023-02-16)Emerging viruses represent a significant threat to human health. Understanding the drivers of emergence, such as viral evolution, is a critical avenue to combat these pathogens. One specific group of emerging pathogens of interest is flaviviruses. Flaviviruses are arthropod-borne viruses (arbovirus) in the family Flaviviridae. The medically relevant flaviviruses can be divided into two groups – tick-borne and mosquito-borne. Included within the mosquito-borne flaviviruses group are dengue viruses 1-4 (DENV 1-4), which causes 400 million infections annually, and Zika virus (ZIKV), which caused over 128 million infections from 2013-2018. These viruses, which are cocirculating, share high sequence similarity in key antigenic regions. Because of these similarities, pre-existing immunity to DENV has been correlated with altered pathogenesis of subsequent ZIKV infections. Despite this, there has been little analysis of the effects of pre-existing DENV immunity on the evolution of subsequent flavivirus infection, despite being characterized for many other viruses. Given that mutation that could arise from cross-reactive immune selection could alter pathology or transmissibility, it is critical to assess the role of cross-reactive immune selection as an evolutionary driver. However, this line of research has historically been difficult due to the inherent toxicity of flavivirus infectious clones in bacteria. To mitigate the toxic nature of flavivirus clones, we developed several entirely in vitro workflows using a combination of rolling circle amplification (RCA) and replication cycle reaction (RCR). We demonstrated that RCA was a comparable substitute to traditional plasmid propagation using an alphavirus infection clone. We further demonstrated that RCR could be used to generate infectious clones by producing infectious clones of DENV2 and SARS-CoV-2, as well as demonstrating it could be used to introduce mutations into infectious clones by producing a D614G SARS-CoV-2 mutations. With this technology in place, we used in vitro directed evolution system, where we passaged ZIKV in convalescent patient serum to assess the role of cross-reactive immune selection as an evolutionary driver. After passaging, we performed next-generation sequencing to assess the impacts of cross-reactive immune selection on the viral populations and to identify mutations that arose post-passaging. We observed that ZIKV passaged in convalescent DENV serum had reduced diversity and divergence in the premembrane region. Within the convalescent DENV passaged population, we identified two mutations of interest with the dominant antibody binding region – E-V335I and NS1-T139A. These mutations were then introduced using our in vitro workflows. The resulting mutant viruses were then assessed for their replicative fitness in mammalian cell culture and mosquito models and their sensitivity to neutralization. We observed that while both E-V355I and NS1-T139A have increased fitness in mammalian cells, they had reduced fitness in mosquitoes. These results align with the trade-off hypothesis, which states that in a multi-host system, adaptation to one host reduces fitness in the other hosts. When we assessed the neutralization sensitivity of the mutants, we observed that while NS1-T193A was resistant to neutralization, E-V355I was more sensitive to neutralization. These results indicate that neutralization escape is not necessary for enhanced post-passaging in convalescent DENV serum. Our findings demonstrate that cross-reactive immune selection can generate several mutations with altered fitness in mammalian cells and mosquitos. This research is significant for both highlighting novel technologies to facilitate molecular virology and demonstrating that cross-reactive immune selection has the potential to alter the evolutionary trajectory of flaviviruses. This work provides critical information to understand how flaviviruses are evolving and emerging, and therefore critical information to address their threat to human health.