Expression of rabies virus glycoprotein from a recombinant vaccinia virus
- 8 November 1984
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 312 (5990) , 163-166
- https://doi.org/10.1038/312163a0
Abstract
Rabies is one of the oldest diseases know to man, but its successful control has remained elusive. Although effective vaccines of tissue culture origin against rabies do exist, such preparations are expensive. Live vaccinia virus (VV) recombinants expressing influenza or hepatitis B antigens have recently been used to immunize against these diseases. We have now used this approach to produce a novel rabies vaccine. We first altered the rabies glycoprotein cDNA by site-directed mutagenesis and removed the poly(dG) tail. We then aligned the modified cDNA with an early VV promoter sequence inserted within a cloned copy of the vaccinia thymidine kinase gene and transfected this plasmid into VV-infected cells. Recombination between the virus and the plasmid resulted in a recombinant virus harbouring the rabies glycoprotein cDNA. Inoculation of rabbits with the live recombinant virus induced high titres of rabies virus-neutralizing antibodies, and scarification with the recombinant VV protected mice against challenge with street rabies virus.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Linker Tailing: Unphosphorylated Linker Oligonucleotides for Joining DNA TerminiDNA, 1984
- New versatile cloning and sequencing vectors based on bacteriophage M13Gene, 1983
- Physical mapping of vaccinia virus temperature-sensitive mutationsVirology, 1983
- Infectious vaccinia virus recombinants that express hepatitis B virus surface antigenNature, 1983
- Rabies Virus Glycoprotein Analogs: Biosynthesis in Escherichia coliScience, 1983
- Fusion of restriction termini using synthetic adaptor oligonucleotidesGene, 1982
- The pUC plasmids, an M13mp7-derived system for insertion mutagenesis and sequencing with synthetic universal primersGene, 1982
- Structure of the glycoprotein gene in rabies virusNature, 1981
- Inhibition of SV40 replication in simian cells by specific pBR322 DNA sequencesNature, 1981
- Distinctive nucleotide sequences adjacent to multiple initiation and termination sites of an early vaccinia virus geneCell, 1981