construction of recombinant bacmid dna encoding influenza virus a (h1n1) hemagglutinin gene

Authors

samaneh hossainzadeh

fatemeh fotouhi

behrokh farahmand

maryam saleh

atena yousefi

abstract

objective: influenza virus a (h1n1) is an important subtype of the influenza respiratory viruses, which has important worldwide implications. hemagglutinin (ha), an important viral antigen, is responsible for binding to human cell receptors leading to an onset of the disease process. considering the critical role of viral attachment, this study focuses on the extraction and cloning of ha and its large subunit ha1 genes to generate recombinant baculovirus shuttle vectors (bacmid) in order to produce recombinant proteins in insect cells. methods: human influenza virus a/new caledonia 99/20/(h1n1) was propagated in mdck cell culture. total viral rna was extracted using easy-red solution. the full-length ha genome and ha1 fragment were amplified by rt- pcr using specific primers, cloned into a pgem®-teasy vector, and then subcloned into a pfastbac ht plasmid. finally, recombinant bacmids that contained the genes of interest were produced in e. coli dh10bac™ cells. results: expected pcr products of ha genes were evaluated through gel electrophoresis and restriction enzyme analysis. recombinant pgem®-teasy vectors and pfastbac ht donor plasmids were confirmed by pcr, digestion, and sequencing. construction of recombinant bacmid dna was verified by using blue-white colony screening, overnight electrophoresis, and pcr analysis that used either puc/m13 or gene-specific primers. conclusion: in this study, we have successfully constructed recombinant bacmid dna that encoded the full-length ha genome and its ha1 subunit. we intend to transfect sf9 insect cells with these constructs to generate recombinant baculovirus and produce large amounts of desired proteins for future studies.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Construction of a recombinant bacmid DNA containing influenza A virus hemagglutinin gene using a site-specific transposition mechanism

Introduction: In recent years, influenza viruses have caused moderate to severe infections all around the world while so far there is no influenza vaccine that can protect people with only one dose of injection. In this regard, producing a universal vaccine based on virus-like-particles (VLP) could be an ideal approach.  Methods: In this study, the full-length ORF of influenza hemagglutini...

full text

Construction of Recombinant Bacmid DNA Encoding Newcastle Disease Virus (NDV) Fusion Protein Gene

Background and Aims: Newcastle disease virus (NDV) is one of the major pathogen in poultry. Vaccination is intended to control the disease as an effective solution nevertheless this virus is a growing threat to the poultry industry. F gene open reading frame (ORF) from NDV is 1650 bp, encoding a protein of 553 amino acids that can induce protective immunity alone. The F glycoprotein on the surf...

full text

construction of a recombinant bacmid dna containing influenza a virus hemagglutinin gene using a site-specific transposition mechanism

introduction: in recent years, influenza viruses have caused moderate to severe infections all around the world while so far there is no influenza vaccine that can protect people with only one dose of injection. in this regard, producing a universal vaccine based on virus-like-particles (vlp) could be an ideal approach.  methods: in this study, the full-length orf of influenza hemagglutinin (ha...

full text

construction of recombinant bacmid dna encoding newcastle disease virus (ndv) fusion protein gene

background and aims: newcastle disease virus (ndv) is one of the major pathogen in poultry. vaccination is intended to control the disease as an effective solution nevertheless this virus is a growing threat to the poultry industry. f gene open reading frame (orf) from ndv is 1650 bp, encoding a protein of 553 amino acids that can induce protective immunity alone. the f glycoprotein on the surf...

full text

Construction of a Recombinant Bacmid DNA to Express Influenza Virus Matrix Protein1 (M1) in Insect Cell Line

Background and Aims: Virus-like particles (VLPs) have been suggested to be a promising recombinant vaccine approach. Several studies have reported that the influenza VLPs produced in insect cells is an effective vaccine candidate. Due to crucial role of matrix M1 protein in assembly and budding of Influenza particles, in all VLPs structures, M1 protein have been considered as a main component. ...

full text

Isolation and cloning of large subunit of Influenza virus A (H1N1) hemagglutinin gene into Bacmid vector to construct recombinant Baculovirus

Influenza virus A (H1N1) is an important subtype of influenza virus that makes numerous consequences throughout the world. In the first step of viral attachment, main antigenic site of the HA1 domain from the globular head of hemagglutinin (HA) binds to human cell receptors, starting the disease process. In order to produce recombinant subunit protein vaccines, we focus on the nucleotide sequen...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later


Journal title:
modares journal of medical sciences: pathobiology

Publisher: tarbiat modares university

ISSN 1562-9554

volume 14

issue 4 2012

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023