Abstract

Using computer algorithms and commercial DNA synthesis, one or more ORFs of a microbial pathogen such as a virus can be recoded and deoptimized by several strategies that may involve the introduction of up to thousands of nucleotide (nt) changes without affecting amino acid (aa) coding. The synonymous recoding strategies that have been applied to RNA viruses include: deoptimization of codon or codon-pair usage, which may reduce protein expression among other effects; increased content of immunomodulatory CpG and UpA RNA, which increase immune responses and thereby restrict viral replication; and substitution of serine and leucine codons with synonymous codons for which single-nt substitutions can yield nonsense codons, thus limiting evolutionary potential. This can reduce pathogen fitness and create potential live-attenuated vaccines that may have improved properties. The combined approach of genome recoding, synthetic biology, and reverse genetics offers several advantages for the generation of attenuated RNA viruses. First, synonymous recoding involves many mutations, which should reduce the rate and magnitude of de-attenuation. Second, increasing the amount of recoding can provide increased attenuation. Third, because there are no changes at the aa level, all of the relevant epitopes should be expressed. Fourth, attenuation frequently does not compromise immunogenicity, suggesting that the recoded viruses have increased immunogenicity per infectious particle. Synonymous deoptimization approaches have been applied to two important human viral pathogens, namely respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and influenza A virus (IAV). This manuscript will briefly review the use of these different methods of synonymous recoding to generate attenuated RSV and IAV strains. It also will review the characterization of these vaccine candidates in vitro and in animal models, and describe several surprising findings with respect to phenotypic and genetic instability of some of these candidates.

Highlights

  • The availability and affordability of large-scale commercial DNA synthesis opened the field of synthetic biology [1, 2]

  • This review describes the current strategies of synonymous genome recoding used to generate attenuated respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and influenza A virus (IAV) viruses and the characterization in vitro and in vivo of the resulting vaccine candidates

  • Codon-Pair Deoptimization (CPD) or codon deoptimization (CD) of a viral genome frequently result in inadvertent increases in the CpG and UpA content of the recoded virus, which may account for the increased immunogenicity per PFU that sometimes is observed [11]

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Summary

Introduction

The availability and affordability of large-scale commercial DNA synthesis opened the field of synthetic biology [1, 2]. This review describes the current strategies of synonymous genome recoding used to generate attenuated RSV and IAV viruses and the characterization in vitro and in vivo of the resulting vaccine candidates.

Results
Conclusion
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