Mandy Bachmann
Max Planck Society
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mandy Bachmann.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2014
Timo Frensing; Antje Pflugmacher; Mandy Bachmann; Britta Peschel; Udo Reichl
During the replication of influenza viruses, defective interfering particles (DIPs) can be generated. These are noninfectious deletion mutants that require coinfection with a wild-type virus but interfere with its helper virus replication. Consequently, coinfected cells mainly produce DIPs. Little is known about how such noninfectious virus particles affect the virus yield of cell culture-based influenza vaccine production. We compared infections of Madin-Darby canine kidney cells with two seed virus preparations of the influenza virus strain A/Puerto Rico/8/34 that contain different amounts of DIPs. A combination of conventional RT-PCR, RT-qPCR, and flow cytometry revealed that DI genomes indeed strongly accumulate in coinfected cells and impede the viral RNA synthesis. Additionally, cells infected at the higher DIP concentration showed a stronger antiviral response characterized by increased interferon-β expression and apoptosis induction. Furthermore, in the presence of DIPs, a significant fraction of cells did not show any productive accumulation of viral proteins at all. Together, these effects of DIPs significantly reduce the virus yield. Therefore, the accumulation of DIPs should be avoided during influenza vaccine production which can be achieved by quality controls of working seed viruses based on conventional RT-PCR. The strategy for the depletion of DIPs presented here can help to make cell culture-based vaccine production more reliable and robust.
Journal of General Virology | 2016
Mandy Bachmann; Theresa Breitwieser; Christoph Lipps; Dagmar Wirth; Ingo Jordan; Udo Reichl; Timo Frensing
Activation of the innate immune response represents one of the most important cellular mechanisms to limit virus replication and spread in cell culture. Here, we examined the effect of adenoviral gene expression on the antiviral response in adenovirus-transformed cell lines; HEK293, HEK293SF and AGE1.HN. We demonstrate that the expression of the early region protein 1A in these cell lines impairs their ability to activate antiviral genes by the IFN pathway. This property may help in the isolation of newly emerging viruses and the propagation of interferon-sensitive virus strains.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2016
Timo Frensing; Sascha Young Kupke; Mandy Bachmann; Susanne Fritzsche; Lili E. Gallo-Ramirez; Udo Reichl
IFAC-PapersOnLine | 2018
Stefanie Duvigneau; Robert Dürr; Tanja Laske; Mandy Bachmann; Melanie Dostert; Udo Reichl; Achim Kienle
3rd Workshop on Virus Dynamics | 2017
Tanja Laske; Mandy Bachmann; Melanie Dostert; Alexander Karlas; Dagmar Wirth; Timo Frensing; Udo Reichl
international conference on systems | 2016
Tanja Laske; Mandy Bachmann; Timo Frensing; Udo Reichl
IFAC-PapersOnLine | 2016
Robert Dürr; Stefanie Duvigneau; Tanja Laske; Mandy Bachmann; Achim Kienle
ESACT | 2015
Mandy Bachmann; Theresa Breitwieser; Christoph Lipps; Dagmar Wirth; Ingo Jordan; Thomas Rose; Volker Sandig; Udo Reichl; Timo Frensing
25th Annual Meeting of the Society for Virology | 2015
Mandy Bachmann; Theresa Breitwieser; Christoph Lipps; Dagmar Wirth; Ingo Jordan; Thomas Rose; Volker Sandig; Udo Reichl; Timo Frensing
Chemie Ingenieur Technik | 2014
Timo Frensing; Stefan Heldt; Mandy Bachmann; Yvonne Genzel; Ingo Jordan; Udo Reichl