Abstract

Rabies virus (RABV) is highly neurotropic and causes acute infection of the central nervous system. Death can be averted by prompt post-exposure prophylaxis; however, after clinical symptoms appear, the mortality rate is almost 100% and no reliable treatment is available. In this study, we investigated whether intracellular immunization using single-chain variable fragments (scFvs) against RABV phosphoprotein (RABV-P) could inhibit RABV propagation in neuronal cells. Of four scFv clones derived from an scFv phage-displayed library, scFv-P19 showed extremely high transfection efficiency and stable expression in mouse neuroblastoma (MNA) cells. The intracellular affinity and inhibition of RABV propagation were investigated using RABV-infected MNA cells pretransfected with the scFv-P19 gene. The specific interaction between scFv and RABV-P was confirmed by an immunoprecipitation assay and an indirect immunofluorescence assay showing that these molecules colocalized in the cytoplasm. Measurements of the spread of RABV in a culture well and the virus titer in the supernatant showed that RABV inhibition peaked 3 days after infection, at 98.6% and 99.9% inhibition, respectively. Although the mechanism of RABV inhibition by scFv-P19 is not clear, this scFv-based intracellular immunization could be a candidate for future RABV therapeutic studies if combined with appropriate delivery and application systems.

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