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Dive into the research topics where Eckard Wimmer is active.

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Featured researches published by Eckard Wimmer.


Cell | 1989

Cellular receptor for poliovirus: Molecular cloning, nucleotide sequence, and expression of a new member of the immunoglobulin superfamily

Cathy Mendelsohn; Eckard Wimmer; Vincent R. Racaniello

Restriction of poliovirus replication to a few sites in the infected primate host appears to be controlled by the expression of viral receptors. To learn more about these binding sites and their role in viral tissue tropism, cDNA clones encoding functional poliovirus receptors were isolated. The predicted amino acid sequence reveals that the human poliovirus receptor is an integral membrane protein with the conserved amino acids and domain structure characteristic of members of the immunoglobulin superfamily. Northern hybridization analysis indicates that poliovirus receptor transcripts are expressed in a wide range of human tissues, in contrast to the limited expression of virus binding sites, which suggests that additional factors or modifications of the receptor protein are required to permit poliovirus attachment.


Science | 2008

Virus Attenuation by Genome-Scale Changes in Codon Pair Bias

J. Robert Coleman; Dimitris Papamichail; Steven Skiena; Bruce Futcher; Eckard Wimmer; Steffen Mueller

As a result of the redundancy of the genetic code, adjacent pairs of amino acids can be encoded by as many as 36 different pairs of synonymous codons. A species-specific “codon pair bias” provides that some synonymous codon pairs are used more or less frequently than statistically predicted. We synthesized de novo large DNA molecules using hundreds of over-or underrepresented synonymous codon pairs to encode the poliovirus capsid protein. Underrepresented codon pairs caused decreased rates of protein translation, and polioviruses containing such amino acid–independent changes were attenuated in mice. Polioviruses thus customized were used to immunize mice and provided protective immunity after challenge. This “death by a thousand cuts” strategy could be generally applicable to attenuating many kinds of viruses.


Nature | 1998

Protein-primed RNA synthesis by purified poliovirus RNA polymerase

Aniko V. Paul; Jacques H. van Boom; Dmitri V. Filippov; Eckard Wimmer

A small protein, VPg, is covalently linked to the 5′ end of the plus-stranded poliovirus genomic RNA. Poliovirus messenger RNA, identical in nucleotide sequence to genomic RNA, is not capped at its 5′ end by the methylated structure that is common to most eukaryotic mRNAs. These discoveries presented two problems. First, as cap structures are usually required for translation of mRNA into protein, how does this uncapped viral RNA act as a template for translation? Second, what is the function of VPg? The identification of the internal ribosomal-entry site, which allows the entry of ribosomes into viral mRNA independently of the 5′ mRNA end, has solved the first conundrum. Here we describe the resolution of the second problem. VPg is linked to the genomic RNA through the 5′-terminal uridylic acid of the RNA. We show that VPg can be uridylylated by the poliovirus RNA polymerase 3Dpol. Uridylylated VPg can then prime the transcription of polyadenylate RNA by 3Dpol to produce VPg-linked poly(U). Initiation of transcription of the poliovirus genome from the polyadenylated 3′ end therefore depends on VPg.


Journal of Virology | 2000

Identification of an RNA Hairpin in Poliovirus RNA That Serves as the Primary Template in the In Vitro Uridylylation of VPg

Aniko V. Paul; Elizabeth Rieder; Dong Wook Kim; Jacques H. van Boom; Eckard Wimmer

ABSTRACT The first step in the replication of the plus-stranded poliovirus RNA is the synthesis of a complementary minus strand. This process is initiated by the covalent attachment of UMP to the terminal protein VPg, yielding VPgpU and VPgpUpU. We have previously shown that these products can be made in vitro in a reaction that requires only synthetic VPg, UTP, poly(A), purified poliovirus RNA polymerase 3Dpol, and Mg2+ (A. V. Paul, J. H. van Boom, D. Filippov, and E. Wimmer, Nature 393:280–284, 1998). Since such a poly(A)-dependent process cannot confer sufficient specificity to poliovirus RNA replication, we have developed a new assay to search for a viral RNA template in conjunction with viral or cellular factors that could provide this function. We have now discovered a small RNA hairpin in the coding region of protein 2C as the site in PV1(M) RNA that is used as the primary template for the in vitro uridylylation of VPg. This hairpin has recently been described in poliovirus RNA as being an essential structure for the initiation of minus strand RNA synthesis (I. Goodfellow, Y. Chaudhry, A. Richardson, J. Meredith, J. W. Almond, W. Barclay, and D. J. Evans, J. Virol. 74:4590–4600, 2000). The uridylylation reaction either with transcripts of cre(2C) RNA or with full-length PV1(M) RNA as the template is strongly stimulated by the addition of purified viral protein 3CDpro. Deletion of the cre(2C) RNA sequences from minigenomes eliminates their ability to serve as template in the reaction. A similar signal in the coding region of VP1 in HRV14 RNA (K. L. McKnight and S. M. Lemon, RNA 4:1569–1584, 1998) and the poliovirus cre(2C) can be functionally exchanged in the assay. The mechanism by which the VPgpUpU precursor, made specifically on the cre(2C) template, might be transferred to the site where it serves as primer for poliovirus RNA synthesis, remains to be determined.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Reduction of the Rate of Poliovirus Protein Synthesis through Large-Scale Codon Deoptimization Causes Attenuation of Viral Virulence by Lowering Specific Infectivity

Steffen Mueller; Dimitris Papamichail; J. Robert Coleman; Steven Skiena; Eckard Wimmer

ABSTRACT Exploring the utility of de novo gene synthesis with the aim of designing stably attenuated polioviruses (PV), we followed two strategies to construct PV variants containing synthetic replacements of the capsid coding sequences either by deoptimizing synonymous codon usage (PV-AB) or by maximizing synonymous codon position changes of the existing wild-type (wt) poliovirus codons (PV-SD). Despite 934 nucleotide changes in the capsid coding region, PV-SD RNA produced virus with wild-type characteristics. In contrast, no viable virus was recovered from PV-AB RNA carrying 680 silent mutations, due to a reduction of genome translation and replication below a critical level. After subcloning of smaller portions of the AB capsid coding sequence into the wt background, several viable viruses were obtained with a wide range of phenotypes corresponding to their efficiency of directing genome translation. Surprisingly, when inoculated with equal infectious doses (PFU), even the most replication-deficient viruses appeared to be as pathogenic in PV-sensitive CD155tg (transgenic) mice as the PV(M) wild type. However, infection with equal amounts of virus particles revealed a neuroattenuated phenotype over 100-fold. Direct analysis indicated a striking reduction of the specific infectivity of PV-AB-type virus particles. Due to the distribution effect of many silent mutations over large genome segments, codon-deoptimized viruses should have genetically stable phenotypes, and they may prove suitable as attenuated substrates for the production of poliovirus vaccines.


Current Biology | 2002

Nectin couples cell-cell adhesion and the actin scaffold at heterotypic testicular junctions.

Kumi Ozaki-Kuroda; Hiroyuki Nakanishi; Hiroshi Ohta; Hiromitsu Tanaka; Hidetake Kurihara; Steffen Mueller; Kenji Irie; Wataru Ikeda; Tatsuo Sakai; Eckard Wimmer; Yoshitake Nishimune; Yoshimi Takai

Actin-based cell-cell adherens junctions (AJs) are crucial not only for mechanical adhesion but also for cell morphogenesis and differentiation. While organization of homotypic AJs is attributed mostly to classic cadherins, the adhesive mechanism of heterotypic AJs in more complex tissues remains to be clarified. Nectin, a member of a family of immunoglobulin-like adhesion molecules at various AJs, is a possible organizer of heterotypic AJs because of its unique heterophilic trans-interaction property. Recently, nectin-2 (-/-) mice have been shown to exhibit the defective sperm morphogenesis and the male-specific infertility, but the role of nectin in testicular AJs has not been investigated. We show here the heterotypic trans-interaction between nectin-2 in Sertoli cells and nectin-3 in spermatids at Sertoli-spermatid junctions (SspJs), heterotypic AJs in testes. Moreover, each nectin-based adhesive membrane domain exhibits one-to-one colocalization with each actin bundle underlying SspJs. Inactivation of the mouse nectin-2 gene causes not only impaired adhesion but also loss of the junctional actin scaffold at SspJs, resulting in aberrant morphogenesis and positioning of spermatids. Localization of afadin, an adaptor protein of nectin with the actin cytoskeleton, is also nectin-2 dependent at SspJs. These results indicate that the nectin-afadin system plays essential roles in coupling cell-cell adhesion and the cortical actin scaffold at SspJs and in subsequent sperm morphogenesis.


Nature Biotechnology | 2010

Live attenuated influenza virus vaccines by computer-aided rational design

Steffen Mueller; J. Robert Coleman; Dimitris Papamichail; Charles B. Ward; Anjaruwee S. Nimnual; Bruce Futcher; Steven Skiena; Eckard Wimmer

Despite existing vaccines and enormous efforts in biomedical research, influenza annually claims 250,000–500,000 lives worldwide, motivating the search for new, more effective vaccines that can be rapidly designed and easily produced. We applied the previously described synthetic attenuated virus engineering (SAVE) approach to influenza virus strain A/PR/8/34 to rationally design live attenuated influenza virus vaccine candidates through genome-scale changes in codon-pair bias. As attenuation is based on many hundreds of nucleotide changes across the viral genome, reversion of the attenuated variant to a virulent form is unlikely. Immunization of mice by a single intranasal exposure to codon pair–deoptimized virus conferred protection against subsequent challenge with wild-type (WT) influenza virus. The method can be applied rapidly to any emerging influenza virus in its entirety, an advantage that is especially relevant when dealing with seasonal epidemics and pandemic threats, such as H5N1- or 2009-H1N1 influenza.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Characterization of the Nucleoside Triphosphatase Activity of Poliovirus Protein 2C Reveals a Mechanism by Which Guanidine Inhibits Poliovirus Replication

Thomas Pfister; Eckard Wimmer

The highly conserved non-structural protein 2C of picornaviruses is involved in viral genome replication and encapsidation and in the rearrangement of intracellular structures. 2C binds RNA, has nucleoside triphosphatase activity, and shares three motifs with superfamily III helicases. Motifs “A” and “B” are involved in nucleotide triphosphate (NTP) binding and hydrolysis, whereas a function for motif “C” has not yet been demonstrated. Poliovirus RNA replication is inhibited by millimolar concentrations of guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl). Resistance and dependence to GdnHCl map to 2C. To characterize the nucleoside triphosphatase activity of 2C, we purified poliovirus recombinant 2C fused to glutathioneS-transferase (GST-2C) from Escherichia coli. GST-2C hydrolyzed ATP with a K m of 0.7 mm. Other NTPs, including GTP, competed with ATP for binding to 2C but were poor substrates for hydrolysis. Mutation of conserved residues in motif A and B abolished ATPase activity, as did mutation of the conserved asparagine residue in motif C, an observation indicating the involvement of this motif in ATP hydrolysis. GdnHCl at millimolar concentrations inhibited ATP hydrolysis. Mutations in 2C that confer poliovirus resistant to or dependent on GdnHCl increased the tolerance to GdnHCl up to 100-fold.


Journal of Virology | 2000

Genetic and Biochemical Studies of Poliovirus cis-Acting Replication Element cre in Relation to VPg Uridylylation

Elizabeth Rieder; Aniko V. Paul; Dong Wook Kim; Jacques H. van Boom; Eckard Wimmer

ABSTRACT In addition to highly conserved stem-loop structures located in the 5′- and 3′-nontranslated regions, genome replication of picornaviruses requires cis-acting RNA elements located in the coding region (termed cre) (K. L. McKnight and S. M. Lemon, J. Virol. 70:1941–1952, 1996; P. E. Lobert, N. Escriou, J. Ruelle, and T. Michiels, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 96:11560–11565, 1999; I. Goodfellow, Y. Chaudhry, A. Richardson, J. Meredith, J. W. Almond, W. Barclay, and D. J. Evans, J. Virol. 74:4590–4600, 2000). cre elements appear to be essential for minus-strand RNA synthesis by an as-yet-unknown mechanism. We have discovered that the cre element of poliovirus (mapping to the 2C coding region of poliovirus type 1; nucleotides 4444 to 4505 in 2C), which is homologous to thecre element of poliovirus type 3, is preferentially used as a template for the in vitro uridylylation of VPg catalyzed by 3Dpol in a reaction that is greatly stimulated by 3CDpro (A. V. Paul, E. Rieder, D. W. Kim, J. H. van Boom, and E. Wimmer, J. Virol. 74:10359–10370, 2000). Here we report a direct correlation between mutations that eliminate, or severely reduce, the in vitro VPg-uridylylation reaction and produce replication phenotypes in vivo. None of the genetic changes significantly influenced translation or polyprotein processing. A substitution mapping to the first A (A4472C) of a conservedAAACA sequence in the loop of PV-cre(2C) eliminated the ability of the cre RNA to serve as template for VPg uridylylation and abolished RNA infectivity. Mutagenesis of the second A (A4473C; AAACA) severely reduced the yield of VPgpUpU and RNA infectivity was restored only after reversion to the wild-type sequence. The effect of substitution of the third A (A4474G; AAACA) was less severe but reduced both VPg uridylylation and virus yield. Disruption of base pairing within the upper stem region of PV-cre(2C) also affected uridylylation of VPg. Virus derived from transcripts containing mutations in the stem was either viable or quasi-infectious.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009

Cis-acting RNA elements in human and animal plus-strand RNA viruses.

Ying Liu; Eckard Wimmer; Aniko V. Paul

Abstract The RNA genomes of plus-strand RNA viruses have the ability to form secondary and higher-order structures that contribute to their stability and to their participation in inter- and intramolecular interactions. Those structures that are functionally important are called cis-acting RNA elements because their functions cannot be complemented in trans. They can be involved not only in RNA/RNA interactions but also in binding of viral and cellular proteins during the complex processes of translation, RNA replication and encapsidation. Most viral cis-acting RNA elements are located in the highly structured 5′- and 3′-nontranslated regions of the genomes but sometimes they also extend into the adjacent coding sequences. In addition, some cis-acting RNA elements are embedded within the coding sequences far away from the genomic ends. Although the functional importance of many of these structures has been confirmed by genetic and biochemical analyses, their precise roles are not yet fully understood. In this review we have summarized what is known about cis-acting RNA elements in nine families of human and animal plus-strand RNA viruses with an emphasis on the most thoroughly characterized virus families, the Picornaviridae and Flaviviridae.

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Emilio A. Emini

United States Military Academy

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Akio Nomoto

Stony Brook University

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Ying Liu

Stony Brook University

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