Abstract

Five neutralizing antigenic sites have been described for serotype O foot-and-mouth disease viruses (FMDV) based on monoclonal antibody (mAb) escape mutant studies. However, a mutant virus selected to escape neutralization of mAb binding at all five sites was previously shown to confer complete cross-protection with the parental virus in guinea pig challenge studies, suggesting that amino acid residues outside the mAb binding sites contribute to antibody-mediated in vivo neutralization of FMDV. Comparison of the ability of bovine antisera to neutralize a panel of serotype O FMDV identified three novel putative sites at VP2-74, VP2-191 and VP3-85, where amino acid substitutions correlated with changes in sero-reactivity. The impact of these positions was tested using site-directed mutagenesis to effect substitutions at critical amino acid residues within an infectious copy of FMDV O1 Kaufbeuren (O1K). Recovered viruses containing additional mutations at VP2-74 and VP2-191 exhibited greater resistance to neutralization with both O1K guinea pig and O BFS bovine antisera than a virus that was engineered to include only mutations at the five known antigenic sites. The changes at VP2-74 and VP3-85 are adjacent to critical amino acids that define antigenic sites 2 and 4, respectively. However VP2-191 (17 Å away from VP2-72), located at the threefold axis and more distant from previously identified antigenic sites, exhibited the most profound effect. These findings extend our knowledge of the surface features of the FMDV capsid known to elicit neutralizing antibodies, and will improve our strategies for vaccine strain selection and rational vaccine design.

Highlights

  • Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) remains one of the most economically important diseases of cloven-hoofed animals worldwide

  • This study provides evidence for the existence of a new neutralizing epitope that involves VP2-191 at the threefold axis of the capsid, which extends our knowledge of the surface features of the FMD virus (FMDV) capsid known to elicit neutralizing antibodies, and could help better predict vaccine matching and the development of more broadly cross-reactive vaccines

  • The pT7S3/5M plasmid was used as the template to introduce further mutations in the capsid coding regions in addition to the five known neutralizing antigenic sites

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Summary

Introduction

Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) remains one of the most economically important diseases of cloven-hoofed animals worldwide. The causative agent, FMD virus (FMDV), is an aphthovirus that belongs to the family Picornaviridae. It exists as seven immunologically distinct serotypes (O, A, C, Asia 1, SAT 1, SAT 2 and SAT 3). The disease is widespread across the world, especially in Africa and Asia, and is able to spread rapidly (Alexandersen et al, 2003). In addition to circulation of FMD in endemic regions, there are occasional incursions into countries that are normally disease-free, e.g. in the UK in 2001 and in Japan in 2011, resulting in very high economic losses

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