Identification of the flavivirus conserved residues in the envelope protein hinge region for the rational design of a candidate West Nile live-attenuated vaccine

  • Bailey E. Maloney
  • , Kassandra L. Carpio
  • , Ashley N. Bilyeu
  • , Danielle R.D. Saunders
  • , So Lee Park
  • , Adrienne E. Pohl
  • , Natalia Costa Ball
  • , Janae L. Raetz
  • , Claire Y. Huang
  • , Stephen Higgs
  • , Alan D.T. Barrett
  • , Gleyder Roman-Sosa
  • , Joanie L. Kenney
  • , Dana L. Vanlandingham
  • , Yan Jang S. Huang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The flavivirus envelope protein is a class II fusion protein that drives flavivirus-cell membrane fusion. The membrane fusion process is triggered by the conformational change of the E protein from dimer in the virion to trimer, which involves the rearrangement of three domains, EDI, EDII, and EDIII. The movement between EDI and EDII initiates the formation of the E protein trimer. The EDI-EDII hinge region utilizes four motifs to exert the hinge effect at the interdomain region and is crucial for the membrane fusion activity of the E protein. Using West Nile virus (WNV) NY99 strain derived from an infectious clone, we investigated the role of eight flavivirus-conserved hydrophobic residues in the EDI-EDII hinge region in the conformational change of E protein from dimer to trimer and viral entry. Single mutations of the E-A54, E-I130, E-I135, E-I196, and E-Y201 residues affected infectivity. Importantly, the E-A54I and E-Y201P mutations fully attenuated the mouse neuroinvasive phenotype of WNV. The results suggest that multiple flavivirus-conserved hydrophobic residues in the EDI-EDII hinge region play a critical role in the structure–function of the E protein and some contribute to the virulence phenotype of flaviviruses as demonstrated by the attenuation of the mouse neuroinvasive phenotype of WNV. Thus, as a proof of concept, residues in the EDI-EDII hinge region are proposed targets to engineer attenuating mutations for inclusion in the rational design of candidate live-attenuated flavivirus vaccines.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number172
Journalnpj Vaccines
Volume8
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2023

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Immunology
  • Pharmacology
  • Infectious Diseases
  • Pharmacology (medical)

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