Abstract

BackgroundHosts are able to restrict viral replication to contain virus spread before adaptive immunity is fully initiated. Many viruses have acquired genes directly counteracting intrinsic restriction mechanisms. This phenomenon has led to a co-evolutionary signature for both the virus and host which often provides a barrier against interspecies transmission events. Through different mechanisms of action, but with similar consequences, spumaviral feline foamy virus (FFV) Bet and lentiviral feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) Vif counteract feline APOBEC3 (feA3) restriction factors that lead to hypermutation and degradation of retroviral DNA genomes. Here we examine the capacity of vif to substitute for bet function in a chimeric FFV to assess the transferability of anti-feA3 factors to allow viral replication.ResultsWe show that vif can replace bet to yield replication-competent chimeric foamy viruses. An in vitro selection screen revealed that an engineered Bet-Vif fusion protein yields suboptimal protection against feA3. After multiple passages through feA3-expressing cells, however, variants with optimized replication competence emerged. In these variants, Vif was expressed independently from an N-terminal Bet moiety and was stably maintained. Experimental infection of immunocompetent domestic cats with one of the functional chimeras resulted in seroconversion against the FFV backbone and the heterologous FIV Vif protein, but virus could not be detected unambiguously by PCR. Inoculation with chimeric virus followed by wild-type FFV revealed that repeated administration of FVs allowed superinfections with enhanced antiviral antibody production and detection of low level viral genomes, indicating that chimeric virus did not induce protective immunity against wild-type FFV.ConclusionsUnrelated viral antagonists of feA3 cellular restriction factors can be exchanged in FFV, resulting in replication competence in vitro that was attenuated in vivo. Bet therefore may have additional functions other than A3 antagonism that are essential for successful in vivo replication. Immune reactivity was mounted against the heterologous Vif protein. We conclude that Vif-expressing FV vaccine vectors may be an attractive tool to prevent or modulate lentivirus infections with the potential option to induce immunity against additional lentivirus antigens.

Highlights

  • Hosts are able to restrict viral replication to contain virus spread before adaptive immunity is fully initi‐ ated

  • Inoculation of cats in the feline foamy virus (FFV)-Vif chimera cohort with wild-type FFV or re-inoculation with FFV-Vif chimeric virus boosted anti-FFV Gag antibody titer following re-infection. These results suggest that compensatory changes arising in vitro seemingly allowed feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV)-Vif to substitute for FFV-Bet function, but were incapable of fully supporting FFV-Vif chimeric replication competence in vivo

  • FFV Bet binds to all feline APOBEC3 (feA3) isoforms and inactivates their restriction potential by a degradation-independent, different mechanism not comparable to FIV Vif [33, 34]

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Summary

Introduction

Hosts are able to restrict viral replication to contain virus spread before adaptive immunity is fully initi‐ ated. Many viruses have acquired genes directly counteracting intrinsic restriction mechanisms. This phenomenon has led to a co-evolutionary signature for both the virus and host which often provides a barrier against interspecies transmission events. In domestic cats (Felis catus), feline foamy virus (FFV) and FIV establish lifelong infections despite specific host antiviral immune responses [18,19,20,21]. FVs are an attractive alternative to LV vectors due to their apathogenicity, wide tissue tropism, and establishment of a persistent infection with ongoing virus gene expression and replication [6, 7, 12, 13, 21, 25, 26]. Investigating FV vector candidates could yield potential new therapies to benefit both humans and animals [16]

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