Tag Archives: Genetic

Experts find remnants of ancient RNA viruses embedded inside reef-building corals

An international team of marine biologists has discovered the remnants of ancient RNA viruses embedded in the DNA of symbiotic organisms living inside reef-building corals.

The RNA fragments are from viruses that infected the symbionts as long ago as 160 million years. The discovery is described in an open-access study published this week in the Nature journal Communications Biology, and it could help scientists understand how corals and their partners fight off viral infections today. But it was a surprising find because most RNA viruses are not known for embedding themselves in the DNA of organisms they infect.

The research showed that endogenous viral elements, or EVEs, appear widely in the genomes of coral symbionts. Known as dinoflagellates, the single-celled algae live inside corals and provide them with their dramatic colors. The EVE discovery underscores recent observations that viruses other than retroviruses can integrate fragments of their genetic code into their hosts’ genomes.

So why did it get in there? It could just be an accident, but people are starting to find that these ‘accidents’ are more frequent than scientists had previously believed, and they’ve been found across all kinds of hosts, from bats to ants to plants to algae.”

Adrienne Correa, Study Co-Author, Rice University

That an RNA virus appears at all in coral symbionts was also a surprise.

“This is what made this project so interesting to me,” said study lead author Alex Veglia, a graduate student in Correa’s research group. “There’s really no reason, based on what we know, for this virus to be in the symbionts’ genome.”

The study was supported by the Tara Ocean Foundation and the National Science Foundation and led by Correa, Veglia and two scientists from Oregon State University, postdoctoral scholar Kalia Bistolas and marine ecologist Rebecca Vega Thurber. The research provides clues that can help scientists better understand the ecological and economic impact of viruses on reef health.

The researchers did not find EVEs from RNA viruses in samples of filtered seawater or in the genomes of dinoflagellate-free stony corals, hydrocorals or jellyfish. But EVEs were pervasive in coral symbionts that were collected from dozens of coral reef sites, meaning the pathogenic viruses were -; and probably remain -; picky about their target hosts.

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“There’s a huge diversity of viruses on the planet,” said Correa, an assistant professor of biosciences. “Some we know a lot about, but most viruses haven’t been characterized. We might be able to detect them, but we don’t know who serves as their hosts.”

She said viruses, including retroviruses, have many ways to replicate by infecting hosts. “One reason our study is cool is because this RNA virus is not a retrovirus,” Correa said. “Given that, you wouldn’t expect it to integrate into host DNA.

“For quite a few years, we’ve seen a ton of viruses in coral colonies, but it’s been hard to tell for sure what they were infecting,” Correa said. “So this is likely the best, most concrete information we have for the actual host of a coral colony-associated virus. Now we can start asking why the symbiont keeps that DNA, or part of the genome. Why wasn’t it lost a long time ago?”

The discovery that the EVEs have been conserved for millions of years suggests they may somehow be beneficial to the coral symbionts and that there is some kind of mechanism that drives the genomic integration of the EVEs.

“There are a lot of avenues we can pursue next, like whether these elements are being used for antiviral mechanisms within dinoflagellates, and how they are likely to affect reef health, especially as oceans warm,” Veglia said.

“If we’re dealing with an increase in the temperature of seawater, is it more likely that Symbiodiniaceae species will contain this endogenous viral element? Does having EVEs in their genomes improve their odds of fighting off infections from contemporary RNA viruses?” he said.

“In another paper, we showed there was an increase in RNA viral infections when corals underwent thermal stress. So there are a lot of moving parts. And this is another good piece of that puzzle.”

Correa said, “We can’t assume that this virus has a negative effect. But at the same time, it does look like it’s becoming more productive under these temperature stress conditions.”

Thurber is the Emile F. Pernot Distinguished Professor in Oregon State’s Department of Microbiology.

Source:
Journal reference:

Veglia, A. J., et al. (2023). Endogenous viral elements reveal associations between a non-retroviral RNA virus and symbiotic dinoflagellate genomes. Communications Biology. doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-04917-9.

Experimental decoy provides long-term protection from SARS-Cov-2 infection

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An experimental “decoy” provided long-term protection from infection by the pandemic virus in mice, a new study finds.

Led by researchers at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, the work is based on how the virus that causes COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, uses its spike protein to attach to a protein on the surface of the cells that line human lungs. Once attached to this cell surface protein, called angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), the virus spike pulls the cell close, enabling the virus to enter the cell and hijack its machinery to make viral copies.

Earlier in the pandemic, pharmaceutical companies designed monoclonal antibodies to glom onto the spike and neutralize the virus. Treatment of patients soon after infection was successful in preventing hospitalization and death. However the virus rapidly evolved through random genetic changes (mutations) that altered the spike’s shape enough to evade even combinations of therapeutic monoclonal antibodies. Thus, such antibodies, which neutralized early variants, became about 300 times less effective against more recent delta and omicron variants.

Published online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the study describes an alternative approach from which the virus cannot escape. It employs a version of ACE2, the surface protein to which the virus attaches, which, unlike the natural, cell-bound version, is untethered from the cell surface. The free-floating “decoy” binds to the virus by its spikes so that it can no longer attach to ACE2 on cells in airways. Unlike the monoclonal antibodies, which are shaped to interfere with a certain spike shape, the decoy mimics the spike’s main target, and the virus cannot easily evolve away from binding to ACE2 and still invade cells.

Treatment with the decoy, either by injection or droplets in the nose, protected 100 percent of the study mice when they were infected in the lab with an otherwise lethal dose of SARS-CoV-2. The decoy lowered the virus load in the mice by 100,000-fold, while mice exposed to a non-active control treatment died. Decoy treatment of mice that were already infected with SARS-CoV-2 caused a rapid drop in viral levels and return to health. This suggests that the decoy could be effective as a therapy post-infection, similar to monoclonal antibodies, the researchers say.

What is remarkable about our study is that we delivered the decoy using a harmless, adeno-associated virus or AAV vector, a type of gene therapy that has been found in previous studies to be safe for use in humans. The viral vector instructs cells in the body to produce the decoy so that the mouse or person is protected long-term, without the need for continual treatment.”

Nathanial Landau, PhD, senior study author, professor, Department of Microbiology at NYU Langone Health

Administered with the vector, says Landau, the treatment caused cells, not only to make the decoy, but to continue making it for several months, and potentially for years.

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Importantly, vaccines traditionally include harmless parts of a virus they are meant to protect against, which trigger a protective immune response should a person later be exposed. Vaccines are less effective, however, if a person’s immune system has been compromised, by diseases like cancer or in transplant patients treated with drugs that suppress the immune response to vaccination. Decoy approaches could be very valuable for immunocompromised patients globally, adds Landau.

Future pandemics

For the new study, the research team made key changes to a free ACE2 receptor molecule, and then fused the spike-binding part of it to the tail end of an antibody with the goal of strengthening its antiviral effect. Attaching ACE2 to the antibody fragment to form what the team calls an “ACE2 microbody” increases the time that the molecule persists in tissues (its half-life). The combination also causes the molecules to form dimers, mirror-image molecular pairs that increase the strength with which the decoy attaches to the viral spike.

Whether administered via injection into muscle, or through droplets in the nasal cavity, the study’s AAV vectors provided mice with long-lasting protection COVID infection, including the current Omicron variants.

The approach promises to be effective even if another coronavirus, a type of virus common in birds and bats or apes, were to be transferred to humans in the future, an event termed “zoonosis.” As long as the future virus also uses ACE2 to target cells, the decoy would be ready for “off-the-shelf” soon after an outbreak. If the virus were to somehow switch its receptor a different protein on the surface of lung cells, the decoy could be modified to target the new virus, says Landau.

Along with Landau, the study authors were Takuya Tada and Julia Minnee in the Department of Microbiology at NYU Grossman School of Medicine. The study was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health.

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Source:
Journal reference:

Tada, T., et al. (2023) Vectored immunoprophylaxis and treatment of SARS-CoV-2 infection in a preclinical model. PNAS. doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2303509120.

Novel gene-editing strategy harnesses an unusual protective ability to eliminate HIV-1 infection

Genetic alterations that give rise to a rare, fatal disorder known as MOGS-CDG paradoxically also protect cells against infection by viruses. Now, scientists at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University have harnessed this unusual protective ability in a novel gene-editing strategy aimed at eliminating HIV-1 infection with no adverse effects on cell mortality.

The new approach, described online April 28 in the journal Molecular Therapy – Nucleic Acids, is based on a combination of two gene-editing constructs, one that targets HIV-1 DNA and one that targets a gene called MOGS – defects in which cause MOGS-CDG. In cells from persons infected with HIV-1, the Temple researchers show that disrupting the virus’s DNA while also deliberately altering MOGS blocks the production of infectious HIV-1 particles. The discovery opens up new avenues in the development of a cure for HIV/AIDS.

Proper MOGS function is essential for glycosylation, a process by which some cellular proteins synthesized in the body are modified to make them stable and functional. Glycosylation, however, is leveraged by certain kinds of infectious viruses. In particular, viruses like HIV, influenza, SARS-CoV-2, and hepatitis C, which are surrounded by a viral envelope, rely on glycosylated proteins to enter host cells.

In the new study, lead investigators Kamel Khalili, PhD, Laura H. Carnell Professor and Chair of the Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Inflammation, Director of the Center for Neurovirology and Gene Editing, and Director of the Comprehensive NeuroAIDS Center at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine, and Rafal Kaminski, PhD, Assistant Professor at the Center for Neurovirology and Gene Editing at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine designed a genetic approach to exclusively turn on CRISPR to impede MOGS gene expression through DNA editing within immune cells that harbor replication competent, HIV-1. Their novel approach is expected to avoid any impact on the health of uninfected cells that retain normal MOGS gene function. Stimulation of the apparatus in HIV-1 infected cells disrupted the glycan structure of the HIV-1 envelope protein, culminating in the production of non-infectious virus particles.

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“This approach is conceptually very interesting,” said Dr. Khalili, who is also senior investigator on the new study. “By mitigating the ability of the virus to enter cells, which requires glycosylation, MOGS may offer another target, in addition to the integrated viral DNA for developing the next generation of CRISPR gene-editing technology for HIV elimination.”

Dr. Kaminski, Dr. Khalili, and Tricia H. Burdo, PhD, Professor and Vice Chair in the Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Inflammation and the Center for Neurovirology and Gene Editing at Temple and an expert in the use of non-human primate models for HIV-1, have been working together to further assess the efficacy and safety of CRISPR-MOGS strategy in preclinical studies. In previous work, the team demonstrated that CRISPR-based technology can successfully remove viral DNA from the cells of infected non-human primates.

Other researchers who contributed to the study include Hong Liu, Chen Chen, Shuren Liao, and Shohreh Amini, Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Inflammation, Center for Neurovirology and Gene Editing, Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University; Danielle K. Sohaii, Conrad R.Y. Cruz, and Catherine M. Bollard, Center for Cancer and Immunology Research, Children’s National Health System, The George Washington University; Thomas J. Cradick and Jennifer Gordon, Excision Biotherapeutics, San Francisco, CA; Anand Mehta, Stephane Grauzam, and James Dressman, Department of Cell and Molecular Pharmacology, Medical University of South Carolina; and Carlos Barrero and Magda Florez, Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Pharmacy, Temple University.

The research was supported in part by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the W.W. Smith Charitable Trust.

Source:
Journal reference:

Liu, H., et al. (2023) Strategic Self-Limiting Production of Infectious HIV Particles by CRISPR in Permissive Cells. Molecular Therapy — Nucleic Acids. doi.org/10.1016/j.omtn.2023.04.027.

UK’s first Centre for Phage Research highlights Actiphage in the KTN UK Phage Innovation Showcase

Tuberculosis is caused by a bacterium that has evolved to evade the body’s immune system; now, its natural enemy, a phage, is being used to detect the infection at an early stage. The UK’s first Centre for Phage Research is being officially launched on 16th May and featured in the Innovate UK KTN’s UK Phage Innovation Showcase will be Actiphage®, a phage-based molecular diagnostic for tuberculosis.

UK’s first Centre for Phage Research highlights Actiphage in the KTN UK Phage Innovation Showcase
Actiphage finds live mycobacterium tuberculosis in the blood and releases its DNA for identification with qPCR. Image Credit: PBD Biotech.

Catherine Rees, Professor of Microbiology at University of Nottingham, is a co-founder of PBD Biotech, developers of Actiphage.

I am delighted to be supporting the launch of the University of Leicester’s Centre for Phage Research and to be given an opportunity to highlight our phage-based technology in the KTN UK Phage Innovation Showcase. These developments emphasise the UK’s recognised strength in phage research and I look forward to the exciting new collaborations and technology developments that will arise from these important networking events.”

Catherine Rees, Professor of Microbiology, University of Nottingham | Co-founder, PBD Biotech | Developers of Actiphage

A quarter of the world’s population are carriers of tuberculosis but show no symptoms. It can remain hidden in the body and only progress to full disease when the immune system is weakened, perhaps by other disease or malnutrition. Tuberculosis disease is preventable but can be fatal unless treated. The challenge is how to detect the people that have active disease and treat them before they become infective – thereby breaking the cycle of infection.

The bacterium, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) has proven difficult to detect as it has a hard cell wall that prevents the release of its DNA, and it is slow to culture. Actiphage uses a phage, a virus specific to Mtb, to find live cells of Mtb in the blood.

Research at the NIHR Respiratory Biomedical Research Centre in Leicester by Clinical Senior Lecturer and Honorary Consultant Physician, Dr Pranabashis Haldar, has shown that Mtb detected in the blood using Actiphage is an indicator of active TB disease; this is a potential breakthrough in the fight to End TB.

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As we see with the Actiphage test, phages can enhance the scope and sensitivity of molecular diagnostics for bacterial infections by providing a mechanism to identify and release target genetic material for PCR based amplification.

There are specific phages known to infect the vast majority of bacteria that cause infections. Phages are also versatile and may be modified to enable different approaches to the development of clinical diagnostics.”

Dr Pranabashis Haldar, NIHR Respiratory Biomedical Research Centre in Leicester by Clinical Senior Lecturer and Honorary Consultant Physician

Dr Haldar has been invited to join a panel group at the event and he thinks that phages will have multiple roles in the prevention and treatment of bacterial infections.

For more information about the Centre for Phage Research visit le.ac.uk/research/centres/phage-research.

To find out more about Actiphage visit pbdbio.com.

Register for the launch event at iuk.ktn-uk.org/events/uk-phage-innovation-showcase/.

Source:

A novel approach to quantify personal information contained within gut metagenome data

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In a recent study published in Nature Microbiology, researchers used shotgun sequencing to extract human reads from deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in fecal samples of 343 Japanese individuals comprising the main dataset of this study.

They used this gut metagenome data to reconstruct personal information. Some study participants also provided whole genome sequencing (WGS) data for ultra-deep metagenome shotgun sequencing analysis.

Study: Reconstruction of the personal information from human genome reads in gut metagenome sequencing data. Image Credit: KaterynaKon/Shutterstock.comStudy: Reconstruction of the personal information from human genome reads in gut metagenome sequencing data. Image Credit: KaterynaKon/Shutterstock.com

Background

The knowledge regarding the human microbiome, microorganisms inhabiting the human body, has expanded considerably in the last ten years, thanks to rapid advancements in technologies like metagenome shotgun sequencing.

This technology allows the sequencing of the non-bacterial component of the microbiome samples, including host DNA. For instance, in fecal samples, the amount of host DNA is less than 10% but is removed to protect the privacy of donors.

Human germline genotype in metagenome data is substantial to enable the re-identification of individuals. However, researchers and donors should recognize that it is highly confidential, so sharing it with the community requires careful consideration.

Apart from ethical concerns related to sharing this data, it is necessary to understand that if human reads in metagenome data are not removed before deposition, what kind of personal information (e.g., sex and ancestry) could this data help recover?

In addition, human reads in gut metagenome data could be a good resource for stool-based forensics, robust variant calling, and polygenic risk scores based estimates of disease risks (e.g., type 2 diabetes).

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Since this data could help quantitatively and precisely reconstruct genotype information, it could complement human WGS data.

About the study

In the present study, researchers applied a few humans reads in the gut metagenome data of the main study dataset to reconstruct personal information, including genetic sex and ancestry. For predicting genetic sex and the ancestries of these 343 individuals, they used sequencing depth of the sex chromosomes and modified likelihood score-based method, respectively.

In addition, the researchers developed methods to re-identify a person from a genotype dataset. Furthermore, they combined two harmonized genotype-calling approaches, the direct calling of rare variants and the two-step imputation of common variants, to reconstruct genotypes.

The main dataset of the study included 343 Japanese participants, whereas the validation dataset for the genetic sex prediction analysis comprised 113 Japanese individuals.

The multi-ancestry dataset, which helped the researchers validate ancestry prediction analysis, comprised 73 individuals of various nationalities, including samples from individuals in New Delhi, India.

The female and male participants in each dataset were 196 & 147, 65 & 48, and 25 & 48, respectively. Likewise, the age range for these three datasets was 20 to 88, 20 to 81, and 20 to 61 years, respectively.

Results and conclusion

Given that human reads in the gut metagenome data were derived consistently from all chromosomes, the read depth of the X chromosome was nearly double in females and that of the Y chromosome in males.

So, in a logistic regression analysis, when the researchers applied a 0.43 Y:X chromosome read-depth ratio to the validation dataset, which correctly predicted the genetic sex of 97.3% of the study samples.

In human microbiome and genetic research, the feasibility of sex prediction using human gut metagenome data could help remove mislabelled samples.

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The study analysis also helped researchers remarkably predict ancestry in 98.3% of individuals using 1,000 Genomes Project (1KG) data as a reference.

However, the likelihood score-based method often misclassified South Asian (SAS) samples as American (AMR) and European (EUR), especially when the number of human reads was small. It is understandable because the genetic diversity of the SAS population is complex.

The likelihood score-based method also efficiently utilized the data from genomic areas with low coverage demonstrating the quantitative power of gut metagenome data to re-identify individuals and successfully re-identified 93.3% of individuals.

Despite ethical concerns, the re-identification method used in this study could help in the quality control of multi-omics datasets comprising gut metagenome and human germline genotype data.

In addition, the authors successfully reconstructed genome-wide common variants using genomic approaches. Historically researchers used stool samples as a source of germline genomes for wild and domestic animals but not humans.

Thus, further development of suitable methodologies could help efficiently utilize the human genome in gut metagenome data and benefit animal research.

Nonetheless, the study remarkably demonstrated that optimized methods could help reconstruct personal information from the human reads in gut metagenome data.

Moreover, the findings of this study could serve as a guiding resource to devise best practices for using the already accumulated gut metagenome data of humans.

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Journal reference:

Novel antibodies target human receptors to neutralize SARS-CoV-2 variants and future sarbecoviruses

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In a recent study published in the Nature Microbiology Journal, researchers generated six human monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that prevented infection by all human angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) binding sarbecoviruses tested, including severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and its variants, Delta and Omicron.

They targeted the hACE2 epitope that binds to the SARS-CoV-2 spike (S) glycoprotein rather than targeting the S protein, which all previous therapeutic mAbs for SARS-CoV-2 targeted.

Study: Pan-sarbecovirus prophylaxis with human anti-ACE2 monoclonal antibodies. Image Credit: paulista/Shutterstock.comStudy: Pan-sarbecovirus prophylaxis with human anti-ACE2 monoclonal antibodies. Image Credit: paulista/Shutterstock.com

Background

The emergence of new variants of SARS-CoV-2, especially Omicron sublineages, made all therapeutic mAbs targeting SARS-CoV-2 S obsolete.

Any new S-targeting mAb therapy will also probably have limited utility because SARS-CoV-2 will continue to adapt to human antibodies. Ideally, mAbs developed in anticipation of future pandemics caused by sarbecoviruses should be resilient to mutations that arise in them.

About the study

In the present study, researchers developed hACE2-binding mAbs that blocked infection by pseudotypes of all tested sarbecoviruses at potencies matching SARS-CoV-2 S targeting therapeutic mAbs. The binding affinity of these mAbs to hACE2 was in the nanomolar to picomolar range.

To develop these mAbs, researchers used the KP and Av AlivaMab mouse strains that generate a human Kappa (κ) light chain and Kappa (κ) and Lambda (λ) light chains carrying antibodies, respectively.

They immunized these mice with monomeric and dimeric recombinant hACE2 extracellular domains. Fusion to the fraction, crystallizable (Fc) portion of human immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) rendered them dimeric.

Further, the team generated hybridomas from mice using sera that inhibited SARS-CoV-2 pseudotyped viruses. They used enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to screen hybridoma supernatants for hACE2-binding mAbs.

Furthermore, the researchers tested the ability of the six most potent mAbs to inhibit Wuhan-hu-1 S pseudotyped infection in Huh-7.5 target cells.

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The team purified chimeric mAbs from the hybridoma culture supernatants and used a SARS-CoV-2 pseudotype assay to reconfirm their antiviral activity. They also sequenced the human Fab variable regions, VH and VL.

The team cloned VH and VL domains from the six most potent chimeric human-mouse mAbs into a human IgG1 expression vector to generate fully human anti-hACE2 mAbs.

They used single-particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) to delineate the structural basis for broad neutralization of anti-hACE2 mAbs.

Specifically, they determined the structure of soluble hACE2 bound to the antigen-binding fragment (Fab) of 05B04, one of the most potent mAbs unaffected by naturally occurring human ACE2 variations.

Finally, the researchers tested these hACE2 mAbs in an animal model and determined their pharmacokinetic behavior.

Results

The researchers identified 82 hybridomas expressing hACE2-binding mAbs, of which they selected ten based on their potency in inhibiting pseudotyped virus infection of Huh-7.5 cells.

These ten mAbs were 1C9H1, 4A12A4, 05B04, 2C12H3, 2F6A6, 2G7A1, 05D06, 05E10, 05G01 and 05H02. Four of the five mAbs from the KP AlivaMab mice, viz., 05B04, 05E10, 05G01, and 05D06, shared identical complementarity-determining regions (CDRs). Conversely, AV AlivaMab mice-derived mAbs were diverse.

While allosteric inhibition of hACE2 activity by the mAbs was theoretically feasible, such inhibition did not occur.

Also, the anti-hACE2 mAbs did not affect hACE2 internalization or recycling, suggesting that the anti-hACE2 mAbs would unlikely undergo accelerated target-dependent clearance from the circulation during in vivo use.

These two findings confirmed that these mAbs would not have harmful side effects based on their target specificity.

In addition, the anti-hACE2 mAbs showed favorable pharmacokinetics and no ill effects on the hACE2 knock-in mice. When used prophylactically in hACE2 knock-in mice, these mAbs conferred near-sterilizing protection against lung SARS-CoV-2 infection.

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Moreover, they presented a high genetic barrier to the acquisition of resistance by SARS-CoV-2.

The six anti-hACE2 mAbs also inhibited infection by pseudotyped SARS-CoV-2 variants, Delta, and Omicron, with similar potency, i.e., half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) values ranging between 8.2 ng ml−1 and 197 ng ml−1.

A cryo-EM structure of the 05B04-hACE2 complex at 3.3 Å resolution revealed a 05B04 Fab bound to the N-terminal helices of hACE2.

05B04-mediated inhibition of ACE2-binding sarbecoviruses through molecular mimicry of SARS-CoV-2 receptor-binding domain (RBD) interactions, providing high binding affinity to hACE2 despite the smaller binding footprint on hACE2.

None of the four most potent mAbs affected hACE2 enzymatic activity or induced the internalization of hACE2 localized on the host cell surface. Thus, based on their target specificity, these mAbs shall not have deleterious side effects.

Though these anti-ACE2 antibodies could effectively inhibit sarbecovirus infection in humans, the fact that the antibodies target a host receptor molecule rather than the SARS-CoV-2 S protein will necessitate their testing in terms of safety, efficacy, and pharmacological behavior in primate models before human clinical trials.

Conclusions

SARS-CoV-2 might evolve and start using receptors other than ACE2, creating another genetic hurdle to overcome for researchers working on the development of SARS-CoV-2 therapeutics.

However, the human anti-hACE2 mAbs engineered in this study showed exceptional breadth and potency in inhibiting infection by hACE2-utilizing sarbecoviruses.

Thus, they represent a long-term, ‘resistance-proof’ prophylaxis and treatment for SARS-CoV-2, even for future outbreaks of SARS-like coronaviruses.

In addition, these mAbs might prove particularly useful for susceptible patients like those with immunodeficiency and in which vaccine-induced protective immunity is unattainable or difficult to attain.

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Journal reference:

Study identifies key genetic mechanism of drug resistance in the deadliest malaria parasites

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An important genetic mechanism of drug resistance in one of the deadliest human malaria parasites has been identified in a new study published in Nature Microbiology.

A second key gene, pfaat1, responsible for encoding a protein that transports amino acids in the membrane of Plasmodium falciparum, is involved in its resistance to the major anti-malaria drug, chloroquine.

The findings may have implications for the ongoing battle against malaria, which infects an estimated 247 million people worldwide and kills more than 619,000 each year, most of which are young children.

Chloroquine is a major antimalaria drug, however in recent years, resistance has emerged in malaria parasites, first spreading through Southeast Asia and then through Africa in the 1970s and 1980s. Although alternative antimalarial drugs have been developed, resistance to chloroquine remains a big challenge.

Since its discovery in 2000, only one gene has been believed to have been responsible for resistance to chloroquine – the resistance transporter pfcrt which helps the malaria parasite transport the drug out of a key region in their cells, subsequently rendering it ineffective.

In this study, researchers from the Medical Research Council (MRC) Unit The Gambia at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) analysed more than 600 genomes of P. falciparum that were collected in The Gambia over a period of 30 years. The team found that mutant variants of  a second gene, pfaat1, which encodes an amino acid transporter, increased in frequency from undetectable to very high levels between 1984 and 2014. Importantly, their genome-wide population analyses also indicated long term co-selection on this gene alongside the previously-known resistance gene pfcrt.

In the laboratory, a further team of researchers including from Texas Biomed, University of Notre Dame and Seattle Children’s Research Institute found that replacing these mutations in parasite genomes using CRISPR gene-editing technology impacted drug resistance. A team from Nottingham University also found that these mutations could impact the function of pfaat1 in yeast, resulting in drug resistance.

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Complementary analysis of malaria genome datasets additionally suggested that parasites from Africa and Asia may carry different mutations in pfaat1 which could help explain differences in the evolution of drug resistance across these continents.

Alfred Amambua-Ngwa, Professor of Genetic Epidemiology at MRC Unit The Gambia at LSHTM said: “This is a very clear example of natural selection in action – these mutations were preferred and passed on with extremely high frequency in a very short amount of time, suggesting they provide a significant survival advantage.

“The mutations in pfaat1 very closely mirror the increase of pfcrt mutations. This, and other genetic analyses in the paper demonstrate that the transporter AAT1 has a major role in chloroquine resistance.”

Grappling with drug resistance, for malaria and other pathogens, requires taking a holistic approach to both drug development and pathogen surveillance. We must be aware that different genes and molecules will be working together to survive treatments. That is why looking at whole genomes and whole populations is so critical.”

David Conway, Professor of Biology, LSHTM

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Source:
Journal reference:

Amambua-Ngwa, A., et al. (2023). Chloroquine resistance evolution in Plasmodium falciparum is mediated by the putative amino acid transporter AAT1. Nature Microbiology. doi.org/10.1038/s41564-023-01377-z.

MGI Empowers the Completion of Nearly 60,000 Samples for The Million Microbiome of Humans Project

SHENZHEN, China, 10 May 2023 – MGI Tech Co. Ltd. (MGI), a company committed to building core tools and technology to lead life science, today shared that a total of nearly 60,000 samples have been sequenced among 21 institutes and over 10 participating nations throughout Europe, as part of the Million Microbiome of Humans Project (MMHP) that was officially launched in 2019.

Image Credit: MGI

The project was launched as a joint effort by the Karolinska Institute of Sweden, Shanghai National Clinical Research Center for Metabolic Diseases in China, the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, Technical University of Denmark, MetaGenoPolis at the National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and Environment (INRAE) in France, and the Latvian Biomedical Research and Study Center. Relying on MGI’s core DNBSEQ™ technology, MMHP aims to sequence and analyze microbial DNA from a million human samples to construct a microbiome map of the human body and build the world’s largest human microbiome database.

“Countless studies have highlighted the importance of the microbiome in human health and disease. Yet, our knowledge of the composition of the microbiome in different parts of the body across countries, ages, sexes, and in relation to human health and disease remains limited,” said Duncan Yu, President of MGI. “Through MMHP, we are pushing forward microbial metagenomic research while empowering researchers within the microbiology community with access to MGI’s innovative sequencing technology. Despite a brief interruption by the COVID-19 pandemic, we are delighted to see such a monumental milestone merely four years into the project.”

The rise of microbial metagenomic sequencing​​​​​​​

Since the first description of human microbiome was published in 2010, the field of human microbiome has moved fast from sampling hundreds of individuals to thousands. Advances in genome sequencing has enabled researchers to better characterize the composition of the microbiome through identification of unculturable microbes. It has also allowed them the opportunity to study how the microbiome influences the development of some cancers and drug responses.

Metagenomics, coupled with high-throughput sequencing technologies, have revolutionized microbial ecology. Today, metagenomic sequencing has become both a powerful and popular tool for identifying and classifying complex microbial communities. It facilitates accelerated discovery of new markers that translate to virulence or antibiotic resistance, as well as de novo discovery and characterization of novel species and assembly of new genomes. Besides human microbiome, it is highly applicable in agricultural microbiome studies, environmental microbiome studies, pathogen surveillance and identification, and monitoring of antimicrobial resistance genes.

Indeed, the global metagenomic sequencing market was estimated to be worth USD 1.86 billion in revenue in 2022 and is poised to reach USD 4.33 billion by 2027, growing at a CAGR of 18.4% during the forecast period. In particular, Europe and Africa account for approximately 29.7% market share from the globe, ranking second after North America at 45.6%. Thanks to continuous technological innovations in high-throughput sequencing platforms, the metagenomic sequencing market within Europe and Africa is projected to grow from USD 551.7 million in 2022 to 1.29 billion by 2027, presenting huge market opportunities and providing local institutions with the impetus to invest and get involved.

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Image Credit: MGI

An optimized workflow with MGI’s cutting-edge technology

Equipped with MGI’s innovative lab systems, the MMHP Consortium guarantees high-throughput processes, extreme precision, and high quality data output. The dedicated, one-stop workflow begins with sample transfer on MGISTP-7000* high-throughput automated sample transfer processing system. It then goes through nucleic acid extraction and library preparation on MGISP-960 high-throughput automated sample preparation system, a flexible and fully automated workstation capable of processing 96 samples per run. MGISP-960’s fully automatic operation design allows DNA extraction of 50,000 samples per year and library preparation of 25,000 samples per year. MGISP-Smart 8, the professional automated pipetting robot, equipped with an independent 8 pipetting channel can be used for the pooling, normalization and DNB making. Lastly, DNBSEQ-T7* ultra-high throughput sequencer and DNBSEQ-G400* versatile benchtop sequencer enables an efficient, productive, and streamlined sequencing experience.

“We are very focused on data quality, cost and time. After contrasting DNBSEQ™ technology by MGI with other sequencing technologies, we are convinced that MGI’s products have met high industry standards and provide a very good user experience,” commented Professor Lars Engstrand, Research Director of Center for Microbial Translational Research (CMTR) at Karolinska Institutet. “MGI’s platforms have enabled our team to upgrade our original microbiological research from 16SrRNA gene amplicon sequencing to shotgun metagenomic sequencing. I look forward to introducing more equipment and super-large projects as human microbiome emerges as a crucial diagnostic and treatment method in precision medicine.”

The next chapter in microbiomics

“Microbiomics will be part of precision medicine in the future, and data from the microbiome biobank that will result from MMHP will be leveraged for therapeutic R&D,” said Professor Stanislav Dusko Ehrlich of University College London, UK. “With 21 public and private institutions and 10+ countries currently involved in MMHP, we are actively looking for more research groups to take part in this landmark international microbiological research partnership and help generate the world’s biggest free-access human microbiome database.”

Since the inception of MMHP, MGI has played an important role in providing the program with state-of-the-art research platforms and technologies. Now entering its second phase towards sequencing and analyzing a final total of one million samples, the project welcomes further exchange and participation from relevant organizations to jointly promote research and applications of cutting-edge translational medicine in the field of microbiome. Those interested can fill the application form on www.mgi-tech.eu/mmhp.

About MGI

MGI Tech Co. Ltd. (MGI), headquartered in Shenzhen, is committed to building core tools and technology to lead life science through intelligent innovation. Based on its proprietary technology, MGI focuses on research & development, production and sales of sequencing instruments, reagents, and related products to support life science research, agriculture, precision medicine and healthcare. MGI is a leading producer of clinical high-throughput gene sequencers*, and its multi-omics platforms include genetic sequencing*, medical imaging, and laboratory automation. MGI’s mission is to develop and promote advanced life science tools for future healthcare. For more information, please visit the MGI website or connect with us on TwitterLinkedIn or YouTube.

*Unless otherwise informed, StandardMPS and CoolMPS sequencing reagents, and sequencers for use with such reagents are not available in Germany, Spain, UK, Sweden, Italy, Czech Republic, Switzerland and Hong Kong (CoolMPS is available in Hong Kong).

*For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures (except as specifically noted).

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How the COVID pandemic has improved genomics

insights from industryDavide CacciharelliMolecular Biology and Genomics ProfessorUniversity of Naples

In this interview, Davide Cacchiarelli, Molecular Biology and Genomics Professor at the University of Naples talks to NewsMed about how the COVID pandemic has highlighted the vital role of genomic surveillance and improved genomics.

Please introduce yourself and what inspired your career in molecular biology and genomics?

My name is Davide Cacchiarelli, and I am a molecular biology and genomics professor at the University of Naples. I was inspired by the fact that genomics is classed as an effective tool to improve human health, dissect the molecular events happening in the cell and nucleus, and better understand how cells and organisms work.

Image Credit: ShutterStock/pinkeyes

In The Telethon Institute of Genetics and Medicine, you combine various disciplines with cell biology, molecular biology, and genomics. Why is having a multidisciplinary approach useful when making discoveries, particularly surrounding infectious diseases such as COVID?

The majority of the time, a single omic, measuring only gene expression by RNA sequencing, measuring only epigenetics, or measuring only phenotype, is insufficient to understand how a cell works.

The best solution is to combine all efforts to understand how these events happen, from the nucleus to the cell’s exterior. COVID, in particular, has been a case where acquiring one single omic or a single view of how the system works is ineffective in understanding how COVID behaviors occur in the population or clinically hospitalized patients.

We, therefore, try to combine the general information and patient outcome to get the best result regarding COVID infection.

Davide Cacciarelli at ICG17 – How the COVID pandemic has improved genomics

On what research areas are you and your team at TIGEM currently focusing?

Our group aims to answer various questions, from basic microbiology to developmental biology. Then we can re-engineer it for real regenerative medicine purposes. We also look at how we can effectively use genomics as a medical instrument that can be used to impact the healthcare of patients in our healthcare system.

You have recently co-authored a paper, “Improved SARS-CoV-2 sequencing surveillance allows the identification of new variants and signatures in infected patients.” Can you expand on that?

One of the significant issues in Italy regarding SARS-CoV-2 genome sequencing was the cost. Sequencing the COVID genome was also a tedious and elaborate procedure.

Image Credit: ShutterStock/Kateryna Kon

The main objective was first to make this approach economically affordable and create a proof of printing pulled by which this approach could become a cost-effective method for anyone and any country.

Our second approach, therefore, included integrating the genome information and the transcriptomic profiling of the patient airway epithelia. This helps us to understand how the genome evolves and allows us to track its evolution, in addition to seeing the response of the host respiratory epithelium. Finally, we implemented new ways to classify viral variants based on different characteristics using this approach.

What are the advantages of better identifying new cells, or two variants, for healthcare centers and patients?

The European Center for Disease Control has issued several requirements for next year focused on tracking respiratory viruses. One of these is tracking emerging variants as soon as possible, which we have done with COVID-19. We now know that new, specific variants can emerge in a short timeframe, so immediate tracking is crucial to help contain or at least delay the spreading of possible pathogenic variants.

MGI offers a variety of tools and technology surrounding genomics. Can you tell us more about some of the products used during your research and your experience with them?

At MGI, we have typically applied the COVID and whole genome solutions. We also have the freedom to test the stereo-seq they have in production this month. MGI can offer alternative solutions for various genome sequencing needs.

Image Credit: ShutterStock/peterschreiber.media

At present many sequencing genomic companies are coming up with different solutions. At MGI, we understand that the best genomic solution is the one that better fits your needs. With our experience, for example, with COVID, MGI had the right solution at the right moment.

How important is selecting the right sequencing technology for your research? When undertaking new research, what do you look for in a product/sequencer?

When the primary focus is not on identifying genes or mapping gene expression but on identifying or qualifying gene variants, there must be no issues in the sequencing, as the sequencing issue might be an error in the sequencing and misinterpreted data.

The error rate of MGI technology on DNB sequencing is extremely low, which offers significant benefits. Users can confidently rely on the data at the level of leaders in the field, which is what we look for when we start COVID genome sequencing.

You have often collaborated with other researchers throughout your research projects, especially concerning COVID. How vital have these collaborations been in accelerating your research?

Like many scientists who faced the COVID pandemic, I had much to learn. We used our knowledge in medical genetics and variant interpretation, and the crosstalk we had with virologists, MGI scientists, and genomic specialists was a step towards acquiring the best solution and the best effort to try to get those results as soon as possible, which is crucial for COVID sequencing.

Surprisingly, some scientists who had no interest in healthcare possessed knowledge valuable in tackling COVID issues. The circumstances and contingencies around the event forced them to think outside the box.

Do you believe that if we can understand SARS-CoV-2 better, we could better use this knowledge to prepare ourselves for future pandemics better? What advantages would this have for global health?

COVID did not give us any significant advantages for healthcare, but it may have for science. It highlighted how vital advanced genomics is to track diseases which influenced decisions at the governmental level.

Image Credit: ShutterStock/CKA

Today, several diseases require advanced genome sequencing, such as cancer diagnostics and medical genetics. Given that the issues with this problem affect a small population, you do not feel the urgency to improve specific knowledge or tests.

Therefore, the COVID pandemic has highlighted the vital role of genomic surveillance and improved genomics. Today, we have laboratories that, until two years ago, thought they could never afford to set up a genomic workflow; the pandemic forced them to enter the genomics field. Our mission as genomic scientists is to help them implement this solution in their lab because improving genomics in any lab is the best for healthcare in the future.

There is a saying, “omics for all.” As a scientist, what does that mean to you?

‘Omics for all’ has to be understood in two ways. It is critical to give everybody the chance to have access to omics. However, we need to remember that it is still a medical procedure. Thus, the omics flow offers everybody access to high-quality omics profiling of their genome, but under medical supervision.

Finally, what is the future for you in your research?

I will continue my basic research in my lab: studying how pluripotent cells and stem cells can be manipulated and organized for medical purposes. We also want to use the knowledge accumulated in the COVID pandemic to apply fast, cost-effective, and reliable genome sequencing to other types of screening.

Image Credit: ShutterStock/Anusorn Nakdee

With this in mind, we hope to screen for several hereditary cancers, for example, breast cancer inheritance. Therefore, we can effectively use the COVID strategies we set up for COVID sequencing as proof of principle to apply the sequencing to human and human disease-driving genes.

About MGI

MGI Tech Co., Ltd. (referred to as MGI) is committed to building core tools and technology to lead life science through intelligent innovation. MGI focuses on R&D, production, and sales of DNA sequencing instruments, reagents, and related products to support life science research, agriculture, precision medicine, and healthcare. MGI is a leading producer of clinical high-throughput gene sequencers, and its multi-omics platforms include genetic sequencing, mass spectrometry, medical imaging, and laboratory automation.

Founded in 2016, MGI has more than 1000 employees, nearly half of whom are R&D personnel. MGI operates in 39 countries and regions and has established multiple research and production bases around the world. Providing real-time, comprehensive, life-long solutions, its vision is to enable effective and affordable healthcare solutions for all.


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Fighting tuberculosis with the new MTB Strip Test Kit

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Lecturers of the Faculty of Allied Health Sciences, Chulalongkorn University have developed MTB Strip Test Kit for Tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis that’s accurate and easy to use, guaranteed by the 2023 Invention Award from the National Research Council of Thailand (NRCT) -; Another hope to reduce the spread of tuberculosis in Thailand.

Tuberculosis is one of the most contagious diseases that continues to challenge the public health system today. Although the World Health Organization (WHO) aims for 2035 (the next 12 years) to be the year to end the global tuberculosis crisis, the disease trend is still worrisome.

Thailand is one of the 14 countries with the most severe TB incidence. Fortunately, drug-resistant tuberculosis in Thailand has been removed from the WHO’s list of highest-incidence countries. Only ordinary tuberculosis cases remain.”

Dr. Panan Ratthawongjirakul, Associate Professor, Department of Transfusion Medicine, Faculty of Allied Health Sciences, Chulalongkorn University

Tuberculosis is an airborne disease caused by a bacterium called “Mycobacterium tuberculosis“. It is spread from TB patients to others through small respiratory secretions (AKA droplets) that come from coughing, sneezing, or talking. It is easy to contract and it spreads quickly.

“One of the mechanisms to help end tuberculosis is identifying TB patients as early as possible to control and limit its transmission” said Assoc. Prof. Dr. Panan about the inception of the research project to develop MTB Strip (Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strip) that is easy to use, convenient to read by the naked eye, and with fast and accurate results. More importantly, the cost should not be high to make it accessible to local public health service systems.

“If we can distribute this test to small hospitals everywhere, we will be able to identify TB patients within two hours and screen positive patients quickly into the treatment system. We believe this will help reduce the number of TB cases in our country” said Assoc. Prof. Dr. Panan about the objective of MTB Strip innovation.

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Pros and Cons of the current methods of TB Testing

Assoc. Prof. Dr. Panan mentioned the various advantages and disadvantages of current testing methods for tuberculosis as follows:

  1. Microscopic examination using acid-fast staining is a simple method. It can be done in a small hospital, but the disadvantage is low sensitivity (the minimum bacterial concentration required for a positive signal when examining with a microscopic examination is 5000–10000 cells in 1 ml of sputum.
  2. Sputum culture is the standard method of diagnosing tuberculosis, but it can only be done in well-equipped large hospitals. This method must be done in a room with a high-safety system to prevent it from spreading outside. It takes more than a month to know the results which will result in delayed treatment.
  3. TB Genotyping involves taking the patient’s sputum to extract and amplify the genetic materials which are then tested by a Real-time PCR machine. The disadvantage of this method is that it is costly and requires a lab with specialized personnel, so it can be done only in some hospitals.

Based on the advantages and limitations of various methods used to detect tuberculosis, the research team developed the MTB Strip Test Kit.

Faster and easier TB Screening with MTB Strip

MTB Strip TB Test Kit consists of 2 main parts: 1. Genetic amplification using isothermal amplification with specifically modified and designed primers. 2. Genetic materials detection using developed test strips, which are manufactured from ISO13485-certified industrial plants for medical device manufacturing.

Assoc. Prof. Dr. Panan explained the process of using this test kit “after receiving sputum from the patient, the DNA will be extracted and used as a template. We will put a primer specially designed to amplify the amount of genetic material in the DNA of the pathogen in the patient’s sputum before entering the isothermal amplification process by using a recombinase polymerase amplification technique. It takes only 20 – 40 minutes at 37 degrees Celsius. Then, the developed test strip is dipped into the amplified genetic material. The results will appear on the test strip as positive and negative results like the ATK test that we are familiar with.”

The key feature of the MTB Strip is its sensitivity to tuberculosis. With a small amount of tuberculosis in the sputum, the test can detect it and display the result. In addition, the test process takes less than an hour and does not require any special tools.

“The results are up to 96 percent accurate compared to Realtime PCR and other commonly used acid-resistant dye methods. Importantly, this kit is cheaper than molecular biology tests because it does not require any special tools such as thermocycler” Assoc. Prof. Dr. Panan emphasized.

The MTB Strip kit uses the principle of amplifying genetic material under a single constant temperature in conjunction with a heat box. In a typical laboratory, this type of box is already available. Small hospitals can also use this technique.

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“The MTB Strip TB test kit we have developed will enable many existing small and medium-sized hospitals in Thailand to screen for TB cases so that patients can receive appropriate treatment quickly, thereby reducing the number of TB cases and the spread of TB.”

Fighting tuberculosis with the Distribution of MTB strips to the provinces

The MTB Strip Test prototypes have already been administered at Umphang Hospital, Tak Province in 2019-2020 and the results are good to a certain extent. However, Assoc. Prof. Dr. Panan has not stopped developing methods and innovations to reduce the number of cases of tuberculosis in Thailand.

“Although the MTB Strip kit works satisfactorily, we would still like to develop more sensitivity by making the DNA extraction easier to be used as the kit primer.”

In addition, Assoc. Prof. Dr. Panan also has plans to expand the testing of TB and related diseases by developing an easier-to-use DNA extraction kit and TB test kit that can identify drug-resistant variants of TB right from the outset, so that more specific treatment guidelines can be set.

“We are currently conducting in-depth research on the genetic modification of tuberculosis using a novel technique of genetic modification for a living organism called CRISPR Cas-9 Interference to modify certain TB genes, making the infection less aggressive and more responsive to antituberculosis drugs. CRISPR Cas-9 Interference can be used in conjunction with current antituberculosis drugs.”

If the study is successful, it will be a new TB treatment of the future, which Assoc. Prof. Dr. Panan is sure will help reduce the number of TB cases to reach WHO’s target. Small hospitals interested in the MTB Strip Test kits can contact Assoc. Prof. Dr. Panan Rathwongjirakul, the Research Unit of Innovative Diagnosis of Antimicrobial Resistance, Department of Transfusion Medicine and Clinical Microbiology, Faculty of Allied Health Sciences, Chulalongkorn University.

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