These results provided new insight into understanding the therapeutic role and mechanism of antibody against persistent viral infection. The E6F6-like mAbs may provide a novel immunotherapeutic agent against human chronic HBV infection.
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) X protein, HBx, interacts with anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL proteins through its BH3-like motif to promote HBV replication and cytotoxicity. Here we report the crystal structure of HBx BH3-like motif in complex with Bcl-xL where the BH3-like motif adopts a short α-helix to snuggle into a hydrophobic pocket in Bcl-xL via its noncanonical Trp120 residue and conserved Leu123 residue. This binding pocket is ~2 Å away from the canonical BH3-only binding pocket in structures of Bcl-xL with proapoptotic BH3-only proteins. Mutations altering Trp120 and Leu123 in HBx impair its binding to Bcl-xL in vitro and HBV replication in vivo, confirming the importance of this motif to HBV. A HBx BH3-like peptide, HBx-aa113-135, restores HBV replication from a HBx-null HBV replicon, while a shorter peptide, HBx-aa118-127, inhibits HBV replication. These results provide crucial structural and functional insights into drug designs for inhibiting HBV replication and treating HBV patients.
BackgroundFoot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is an acute, highly contagious disease that infects cloven-hoofed animals. Vaccination is an effective means of preventing and controlling FMD. Compared to conventional inactivated FMDV vaccines, the format of FMDV virus-like particles (VLPs) as a non-replicating particulate vaccine candidate is a promising alternative.ResultsIn this study, we have developed a co-expression system in E. coli, which drove the expression of FMDV capsid proteins (VP0, VP1, and VP3) in tandem by a single plasmid. The co-expressed FMDV capsid proteins (VP0, VP1, and VP3) were produced in large scale by fermentation at 10 L scale and the chromatographic purified capsid proteins were auto-assembled as VLPs in vitro. Cattle vaccinated with a single dose of the subunit vaccine, comprising in vitro assembled FMDV VLP and adjuvant, developed FMDV-specific antibody response (ELISA antibodies and neutralizing antibodies) with the persistent period of 6 months. Moreover, cattle vaccinated with the subunit vaccine showed the high protection potency with the 50 % bovine protective dose (PD50) reaching 11.75 PD50 per dose.ConclusionsOur data strongly suggest that in vitro assembled recombinant FMDV VLPs produced from E. coli could function as a potent FMDV vaccine candidate against FMDV Asia1 infection. Furthermore, the robust protein expression and purification approaches described here could lead to the development of industrial level large-scale production of E. coli-based VLPs against FMDV infections with different serotypes.
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