Antigenic and immunogenic investigation of the virulence motif of the Newcastle disease virus fusion protein.
10.4142/jvs.2010.11.3.205
- Author:
Kang Seuk CHOI
1
;
Eun Kyoung LEE
;
Woo Jin JEON
;
Jun Hun KWON
Author Information
1. Avian Diseases Division, National Veterinary Research and Quarantine Service, Anyang 430-757, Korea. kchoi0608@korea.kr
- Publication Type:Original Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
- Keywords:
B-cell epitope;
fusion protein;
Newcastle disease virus;
virulence motif
- MeSH:
Amino Acid Motifs/*immunology;
Amino Acid Sequence;
Animals;
Chickens;
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay/veterinary;
Epitope Mapping/veterinary;
Newcastle Disease/*immunology;
Newcastle disease virus/*genetics/pathogenicity;
Poultry Diseases/*immunology/*virology;
Serologic Tests/veterinary;
Viral Fusion Proteins/*genetics/immunology;
Virulence/genetics
- From:Journal of Veterinary Science
2010;11(3):205-211
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
Newcastle disease (ND) caused by virulent Newcastle disease virus (NDV) is a highly contagious viral disease of poultry. Virulent NDVs characteristically have a multibasic amino acid sequence (virulence motif) such as (112)RRQKRF(117) at the cleavage site of the precusor fusion (F0) protein. The antigenic and immunogenic characteristics of the virulence motif (112)RRQKRF(117) in the F0 protein of virulent NDVs were investigated. Epitope mapping analysis revealed that a RRQKRF-specific monoclonal antibody 4G2 recognized the KRF section of the motif. A synthetic peptide bearing the RRQKRF motif reacted strongly with sera from virulent NDV (with RRQKRF motif)-infected chickens. These sera also showed reactivity to peptides bearing other virulence motifs ((112)KRQKRF(117), (112)RRQRRF(117) and (112)RRRKRF(117)) but not an avirulence motif ((112)GRQGRL(117)) by ELISA. The synthetic bearing RRQKRF motif reacted with 60% to 91% of sera taken from surviving chickens on ND outbreak farms but not with sera from vaccinated birds, even though most of the sera had antibody to NDV due to vaccination. This indicates that the virulence motif has the potential to differentiate virulent NDV infected birds from vaccinated birds.