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Dive into the research topics where Marko Zivcec is active.

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Featured researches published by Marko Zivcec.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2015

Ebola Virus Diagnostics: The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Laboratory in Sierra Leone, August 2014 to March 2015

Mike Flint; Christin H. Goodman; Scott W. Bearden; Dianna M. Blau; Brian R. Amman; Alison J. Basile; Jessica A. Belser; Eric Bergeron; Michael D. Bowen; Aaron C. Brault; Shelley Campbell; Ayan K. Chakrabarti; Kimberly A. Dodd; Bobbie R. Erickson; Molly M. Freeman; Aridth Gibbons; Lisa Wiggleton Guerrero; John D. Klena; R. Ryan Lash; Michael K. Lo; Laura K. McMullan; Gbetuwa Momoh; James L. Massally; Augustine Goba; Christopher D. Paddock; Rachael A. Priestley; Meredith Pyle; Mark Rayfield; Brandy J. Russell; Johanna S. Salzer

In August 2014, the Viral Special Pathogens Branch of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention established a field laboratory in Sierra Leone in response to the ongoing Ebola virus outbreak. Through March 2015, this laboratory tested >12 000 specimens from throughout Sierra Leone. We describe the organization and procedures of the laboratory located in Bo, Sierra Leone.


PLOS Pathogens | 2015

Recovery of Recombinant Crimean Congo Hemorrhagic Fever Virus Reveals a Function for Non-structural Glycoproteins Cleavage by Furin

Éric Bergeron; Marko Zivcec; Ayan K. Chakrabarti; Stuart T. Nichol; César G. Albariño; Christina F. Spiropoulou

Crimean Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) is a negative-strand RNA virus of the family Bunyaviridae (genus: Nairovirus). In humans, CCHFV causes fever, hemorrhage, severe thrombocytopenia, and high fatality. A major impediment in precisely determining the basis of CCHFV’s high pathogenicity has been the lack of methodology to produce recombinant CCHFV. We developed a reverse genetics system based on transfecting plasmids into BSR-T7/5 and Huh7 cells. In our system, bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase produced complementary RNA copies of the viral S, M, and L segments that were encapsidated with the support, in trans, of CCHFV nucleoprotein and L polymerase. The system was optimized to systematically recover high yields of infectious CCHFV. Additionally, we tested the ability of the system to produce specifically designed CCHFV mutants. The M segment encodes a polyprotein that is processed by host proprotein convertases (PCs), including the site-1 protease (S1P) and furin-like PCs. S1P and furin cleavages are necessary for producing the non-structural glycoprotein GP38, while S1P cleavage yields structural Gn. We studied the role of furin cleavage by rescuing a recombinant CCHFV encoding a virus glycoprotein precursor lacking a functional furin cleavage motif (RSKR mutated to ASKA). The ASKA mutation blocked glycoprotein precursor’s maturation to GP38, and Gn precursor’s maturation to Gn was slightly diminished. Furin cleavage was not essential for replication, as blocking furin cleavage resulted only in transient reduction of CCHFV titers, suggesting that either GP38 and/or decreased Gn maturation accounted for the reduced virion production. Our data demonstrate that nairoviruses can be produced by reverse genetics, and the utility of our system uncovered a function for furin cleavage. This viral rescue system could be further used to study the CCHFV replication cycle and facilitate the development of efficacious vaccines to counter this biological and public health threat.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2017

Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever in Humanized Mice Reveals Glial Cells as Primary Targets of Neurological Infection

Jessica R. Spengler; M. Kelly Keating; Anita K. McElroy; Marko Zivcec; JoAnn D. Coleman-McCray; Jessica R. Harmon; Brigid C. Bollweg; Cynthia S. Goldsmith; Éric Bergeron; James G. Keck; Sherif R. Zaki; Stuart T. Nichol; Christina F. Spiropoulou

Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever in humanized mice indicates a role of glial cell infection in pathogenesis, highlights the importance of additional investigations into neurological disease in human cases, and presents a new model for future studies of pathogenesis and therapeutic screening.


Journal of Virology | 2015

RIG-I mediates an antiviral response to Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus

Jessica R. Spengler; Jenish R. Patel; Ayan K. Chakrabarti; Marko Zivcec; Adolfo García-Sastre; Christina F. Spiropoulou; Éric Bergeron

ABSTRACT In the cytoplasm, the retinoic acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I) senses the RNA genomes of several RNA viruses. RIG-I binds to viral RNA, eliciting an antiviral response via the cellular adaptor MAVS. Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV), a negative-sense RNA virus with a 5′-monophosphorylated genome, is a highly pathogenic zoonotic agent with significant public health implications. We found that, during CCHFV infection, RIG-I mediated a type I interferon (IFN) response via MAVS. Interfering with RIG-I signaling reduced IFN production and IFN-stimulated gene expression and increased viral replication. Immunostimulatory RNA was isolated from CCHFV-infected cells and from virion preparations, and RIG-I coimmunoprecipitation of infected cell lysates isolated immunostimulatory CCHFV RNA. This report serves as the first description of a pattern recognition receptor for CCHFV and highlights a critical signaling pathway in the antiviral response to CCHFV. IMPORTANCE CCHFV is a tick-borne virus with a significant public health impact. In order for cells to respond to virus infection, they must recognize the virus as foreign and initiate antiviral signaling. To date, the receptors involved in immune recognition of CCHFV are not known. Here, we investigate and identify RIG-I as a receptor involved in initiating an antiviral response to CCHFV. This receptor initially was not expected to play a role in CCHFV recognition because of characteristics of the viral genome. These findings are important in understanding the antiviral response to CCHFV and support continued investigation into the spectrum of potential viruses recognized by RIG-I.


Viruses | 2016

Molecular Insights into Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever Virus

Marko Zivcec; Florine E.M. Scholte; Christina F. Spiropoulou; Jessica R. Spengler; Eric Bergeron

Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) is a tick-borne pathogen that causes high morbidity and mortality. Efficacy of vaccines and antivirals to treat human CCHFV infections remains limited and controversial. Research into pathology and underlying molecular mechanisms of CCHFV and other nairoviruses is limited. Significant progress has been made in our understanding of CCHFV replication and pathogenesis in the past decade. Here we review the most recent molecular advances in CCHFV-related research, and provide perspectives on future research.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015

Assessment of Inhibitors of Pathogenic Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever Virus Strains Using Virus-Like Particles.

Marko Zivcec; Maureen G. Metcalfe; César G. Albariño; Lisa Wiggleton Guerrero; Scott D. Pegan; Christina F. Spiropoulou; Éric Bergeron

Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) is an often lethal, acute inflammatory illness that affects a large geographic area. The disease is caused by infection with CCHF virus (CCHFV), a nairovirus from the Bunyaviridae family. Basic research on CCHFV has been severely hampered by biosafety requirements and lack of available strains and molecular tools. We report the development of a CCHF transcription- and entry-competent virus-like particle (tecVLP) system that can be used to study cell entry and viral transcription/replication over a broad dynamic range (~4 orders of magnitude). The tecVLPs are morphologically similar to authentic CCHFV. Incubation of immortalized and primary human cells with tecVLPs results in a strong reporter signal that is sensitive to treatment with neutralizing monoclonal antibodies and by small molecule inhibitors of CCHFV. We used glycoproteins and minigenomes from divergent CCHFV strains to generate tecVLPs, and in doing so, we identified a monoclonal antibody that can prevent cell entry of tecVLPs containing glycoproteins from 3 pathogenic CCHFV strains. In addition, our data suggest that different glycoprotein moieties confer different cellular entry efficiencies, and that glycoproteins from the commonly used strain IbAr10200 have up to 100-fold lower ability to enter primary human cells compared to glycoproteins from pathogenic CCHFV strains.


Nature microbiology | 2018

A cynomolgus macaque model for Crimean–Congo haemorrhagic fever

Elaine Haddock; Friederike Feldmann; David W. Hawman; Marko Zivcec; Patrick W. Hanley; Greg Saturday; Dana P. Scott; Tina Thomas; Miša Korva; Tatjana Avšič Županc; David Safronetz; Heinz Feldmann

Crimean–Congo haemorrhagic fever (CCHF) is the most medically significant tick-borne disease, being widespread in the Middle East, Asia, Africa and parts of Europe1. Increasing case numbers, westerly movement and broadly ranging case fatality rates substantiate the concern of CCHF as a public health threat. Ixodid ticks of the genus Hyalomma are the vector for CCHF virus (CCHFV), an arbovirus in the genus Orthonairovirus of the family Nairoviridae. CCHFV naturally infects numerous wild and domestic animals via tick bite without causing obvious disease2,3. Severe disease occurs only in humans and transmission usually happens through tick bite or contact with infected animals or humans. The only CCHF disease model is a subset of immunocompromised mice4–6. Here, we show that following CCHFV infection, cynomolgus macaques exhibited hallmark signs of human CCHF with remarkably similar viral dissemination, organ pathology and disease progression. Histopathology showed infection of hepatocytes, endothelial cells and monocytes and fatal outcome seemed associated with endothelial dysfunction manifesting in a clinical shock syndrome with coagulopathy. This non-human primate model will be an invaluable asset for CCHFV countermeasures development.This study describes the development of a primate model for Crimean–Congo haemorrhagic fever, the first immunocompetent animal model, which will be instrumental in developing and testing medical countermeasures for this serious disease.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2017

A DNA vaccine for Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever protects against disease and death in two lethal mouse models

Aura R. Garrison; Charles Jason Shoemaker; Joseph W. Golden; Collin J. Fitzpatrick; John J. Suschak; Michelle J. Richards; Catherine V. Badger; Carolyn Six; Jacqueline D. Martin; Drew Hannaman; Marko Zivcec; Éric Bergeron; Jeffrey W. Koehler; Connie S. Schmaljohn

Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) is a tick-borne virus capable of causing a severe hemorrhagic fever disease in humans. There are currently no licensed vaccines to prevent CCHFV-associated disease. We developed a DNA vaccine expressing the M-segment glycoprotein precursor gene of CCHFV and assessed its immunogenicity and protective efficacy in two lethal mouse models of disease: type I interferon receptor knockout (IFNAR-/-) mice; and a novel transiently immune suppressed (IS) mouse model. Vaccination of mice by muscle electroporation of the M-segment DNA vaccine elicited strong antigen-specific humoral immune responses with neutralizing titers after three vaccinations in both IFNAR-/- and IS mouse models. To compare the protective efficacy of the vaccine in the two models, groups of vaccinated mice (7–10 per group) were intraperitoneally (IP) challenged with a lethal dose of CCHFV strain IbAr 10200. Weight loss was markedly reduced in CCHFV DNA-vaccinated mice as compared to controls. Furthermore, whereas all vector-control vaccinated mice succumbed to disease by day 5, the DNA vaccine protected >60% of the animals from lethal disease. Mice from both models developed comparable levels of antibodies, but the IS mice had a more balanced Th1/Th2 response to vaccination. There were no statistical differences in the protective efficacies of the vaccine in the two models. Our results provide the first comparison of these two mouse models for assessing a vaccine against CCHFV and offer supportive data indicating that a DNA vaccine expressing the glycoprotein genes of CCHFV elicits protective immunity against CCHFV.


Cell Reports | 2017

Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever Virus Suppresses Innate Immune Responses via a Ubiquitin and ISG15 Specific Protease

Florine E.M. Scholte; Marko Zivcec; John V. Dzimianski; Michelle K. Deaton; Jessica R. Spengler; Stephen R. Welch; Stuart T. Nichol; Scott D. Pegan; Christina F. Spiropoulou; Éric Bergeron

Antiviral responses are regulated by conjugation of ubiquitin (Ub) and interferon-stimulated gene 15 (ISG15) to proteins. Certain classes of viruses encode Ub- or ISG15-specific proteases belonging to the ovarian tumor (OTU) superfamily. Their activity is thought to suppress cellular immune responses, but studies demonstrating the function of viral OTU proteases during infection are lacking. Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV, family Nairoviridae) is a highly pathogenic human virus that encodes an OTU with both deubiquitinase and deISGylase activity as part of the viral RNA polymerase. We investigated CCHFV OTU function by inactivating protease catalytic activity or by selectively disrupting its deubiquitinase and deISGylase activity using reverse genetics. CCHFV OTU inactivation blocked viral replication independently of its RNA polymerase activity, while deubiquitinase activity proved critical for suppressing the interferon responses. Our findings provide insights into viral OTU functions and support the development of therapeutics and vaccines.


Antiviral Research | 2017

Identification of broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies against Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus

Marko Zivcec; Lisa Wiggleton Guerrero; César G. Albariño; Éric Bergeron; Stuart T. Nichol; Christina F. Spiropoulou

ABSTRACT Despite the serious public health impact of Crimean‐Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF), the efficacy of antivirals targeting the causative agent, CCHF virus (CCHFV), remains debatable. Neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) targeting the CCHFV glycoprotein Gc have been reported to protect mice against challenge with the prototype CCHFV strain, IbAr10200. However, due to extensive sequence diversity of CCHFV glycoproteins, it is unknown whether these MAbs neutralize other CCHFV strains. We initially used a CCHF virus‐like particle (VLP) system to generate 11 VLP moieties, each possessing a glycoprotein from a genetically diverse CCHFV strain isolated in either Africa, Asia, the Middle East, or southeastern Europe. We used these VLPs in biosafety level 2 conditions to efficiently screen MAb cross‐neutralization potency. Of the 16 MAbs tested, 3 (8A1, 11E7, and 30F7) demonstrated cross‐neutralization activity with most CCHF VLPs, with 8A1 neutralizing all VLPs tested. Although binding studies suggest that none of the MAbs compete for the same epitope, combining 11E7, 30F7, or both 11E7 and 30F7 with 8A1 had no additive effect on increasing neutralization in this system. To confirm our findings from the VLP system, the 3 MAbs capable of strain cross‐neutralization were confirmed to effectively neutralize 5 diverse CCHFV strains in vitro. Passaging CCHFV strains in the presence of sub‐neutralizing concentrations of MAbs did not generate escape mutants resistant to subsequent neutralization. This study demonstrates the utility of the VLP system for screening neutralizing MAbs against multiple CCHFV strains, and provides the first evidence that a single MAb can effectively neutralize a number of diverse CCHFV strains in vitro, which may lead to development of future CCHF therapeutics. HighlightsAnalyzed a panel of CCHFV targeting monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) to broadly neutralize CCHFV particles.A virus‐like particle (VLP) neutralization assay identified 3 MAbs capable of neutralizing >8 VLP moieties.MAbs do not compete for the same epitopes and may be used in a combination.The neutralizing potency of MAbs confirmed with a panel of diverse infectious CCHFV.No escape mutants were detected following serial passaging.

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Christina F. Spiropoulou

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Éric Bergeron

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Ayan K. Chakrabarti

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Stuart T. Nichol

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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César G. Albariño

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Jessica R. Spengler

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Lisa Wiggleton Guerrero

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Eric Bergeron

Université de Sherbrooke

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Aaron C. Brault

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Alison J. Basile

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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