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      Early neutralizing IgG response to Chikungunya virus in infected patients targets a dominant linear epitope on the E2 glycoprotein

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          Abstract

          Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) and related arboviruses have been responsible for large epidemic outbreaks with serious economic and social impact. The immune mechanisms, which control viral multiplication and dissemination, are not yet known. Here, we studied the antibody response against the CHIKV surface antigens in infected patients. With plasma samples obtained during the early convalescent phase, we showed that the naturally-acquired IgG response is dominated by IgG3 antibodies specific mostly for a single linear epitope ‘E2EP3’. E2EP3 is located at the N-terminus of the E2 glycoprotein and prominently exposed on the viral envelope. E2EP3-specific antibodies are neutralizing and their removal from the plasma reduced the CHIKV-specific antibody titer by up to 80%. Screening of E2EP3 across different patient cohorts and in non-human primates demonstrated the value of this epitope as a good serology detection marker for CHIKV infection already at an early stage. Mice vaccinated by E2EP3 peptides were protected against CHIKV with reduced viremia and joint inflammation, providing a pre-clinical basis for the design of effective vaccine against arthralgia-inducing CHIKV and other alphaviruses.

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          Most cited references53

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          Reduced surface: an efficient way to compute molecular surfaces.

          Because of their wide use in molecular modeling, methods to compute molecular surfaces have received a lot of interest in recent years. However, most of the proposed algorithms compute the analytical representation of only the solvent-accessible surface. There are a few programs that compute the analytical representation of the solvent-excluded surface, but they often have problems handling singular cases of self-intersecting surfaces and tend to fail on large molecules (more than 10,000 atoms). We describe here a program called MSMS, which is shown to be fast and reliable in computing molecular surfaces. It relies on the use of the reduced surface that is briefly defined here and from which the solvent-accessible and solvent-excluded surfaces are computed. The four algorithms composing MSMS are described and their complexity is analyzed. Special attention is given to the handling of self-intersecting parts of the solvent-excluded surface called singularities. The program has been compared with Connolly's program PQMS [M.L. Connolly (1993) Journal of Molecular Graphics, Vol. 11, pp. 139-141] on a set of 709 molecules taken from the Brookhaven Data Base. MSMS was able to compute topologically correct surfaces for each molecule in the set. Moreover, the actual time spent to compute surfaces is in agreement with the theoretical complexity of the program, which is shown to be O[n log(n)] for n atoms. On a Hewlett-Packard 9000/735 workstation, MSMS takes 0.73 s to produce a triangulated solvent-excluded surface for crambin (1 crn, 46 residues, 327 atoms, 4772 triangles), 4.6 s for thermolysin (3tln, 316 residues, 2437 atoms, 26462 triangles), and 104.53 s for glutamine synthetase (2gls, 5676 residues, 43632 atoms, 476665 triangles).
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            Changing patterns of chikungunya virus: re-emergence of a zoonotic arbovirus.

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              Glycoprotein organization of Chikungunya virus particles revealed by X-ray crystallography.

              Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is an emerging mosquito-borne alphavirus that has caused widespread outbreaks of debilitating human disease in the past five years. CHIKV invasion of susceptible cells is mediated by two viral glycoproteins, E1 and E2, which carry the main antigenic determinants and form an icosahedral shell at the virion surface. Glycoprotein E2, derived from furin cleavage of the p62 precursor into E3 and E2, is responsible for receptor binding, and E1 for membrane fusion. In the context of a concerted multidisciplinary effort to understand the biology of CHIKV, here we report the crystal structures of the precursor p62-E1 heterodimer and of the mature E3-E2-E1 glycoprotein complexes. The resulting atomic models allow the synthesis of a wealth of genetic, biochemical, immunological and electron microscopy data accumulated over the years on alphaviruses in general. This combination yields a detailed picture of the functional architecture of the 25 MDa alphavirus surface glycoprotein shell. Together with the accompanying report on the structure of the Sindbis virus E2-E1 heterodimer at acidic pH (ref. 3), this work also provides new insight into the acid-triggered conformational change on the virus particle and its inbuilt inhibition mechanism in the immature complex.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                EMBO Mol Med
                EMBO Mol Med
                emmm
                EMBO Molecular Medicine
                WILEY-VCH Verlag (Weinheim )
                1757-4676
                1757-4684
                April 2012
                : 4
                : 4
                : 330-343
                Affiliations
                [1 ]simpleSingapore Immunology Network, Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) Biopolis, Singapore
                [2 ]simpleDepartment of Biochemistry, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore Singapore
                [3 ]simpleData Mining Department, Institute for Infocomm Research, A*STAR Fusionopolis Singapore
                [4 ]simpleDepartment of Medical Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
                [5 ]simpleCommunicable Diseases Centre, Tan Tock Seng Hospital Singapore
                [6 ]simpleNational Public Health Laboratory, Communicable Diseases Division, Ministry of Health Singapore
                [7 ]simpleDivision of ImmunoVirology (SIV), Institute of Emerging Diseases and Innovative Therapies (IMETI), CEA Fontenay-aux-Roses, France
                [8 ]simpleEMC Microcollections GmbH Tübingen, Germany
                Author notes
                * Corresponding author: Tel: +65 64070028; Fax: +65 64642057; E-mail: lisa_ng@ 123456immunol.a-star.edu.sg
                [†]

                Present address: Laboratory of Chikungunya Virus Immunity, Singapore Immunology Network, Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), Biopolis, Singapore

                [‡]

                These authors contributed equally to this work.

                Article
                10.1002/emmm.201200213
                3376860
                22389221
                952cece1-79b9-4d55-a7c4-b19c7d90192d
                Copyright © 2012 EMBO Molecular Medicine
                History
                : 10 November 2011
                : 20 December 2011
                : 04 January 2012
                Categories
                Research Article

                Molecular medicine
                serology maker,protection,chikv,linear neutralization epitopes,pre-clinical vaccine

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