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Featured researches published by Nino Ficorilli.


Science | 2012

Attenuated Vaccines Can Recombine to Form Virulent Field Viruses

Sang-Won Lee; Philip F. Markham; Mauricio J. C. Coppo; Alistair R. Legione; John F. Markham; Amir H. Noormohammadi; Glenn F. Browning; Nino Ficorilli; Carol A. Hartley; Joanne M. Devlin

Problems can arise when vaccines and wild strains of a chicken herpesvirus recombine. Recombination between herpesviruses has been seen in vitro and in vivo under experimental conditions. This has raised safety concerns about using attenuated herpesvirus vaccines in human and veterinary medicine and adds to other known concerns associated with their use, including reversion to virulence and disease arising from recurrent reactivation of lifelong chronic infection. We used high-throughput sequencing to investigate relationships between emergent field strains and vaccine strains of infectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV, gallid herpesvirus 1). We show that independent recombination events between distinct attenuated vaccine strains resulted in virulent recombinant viruses that became the dominant strains responsible for widespread disease in Australian commercial poultry flocks. These findings highlight the risks of using multiple different attenuated herpesvirus vaccines, or vectors, in the same populations.


Archives of Virology | 1988

Asinine herpesvirus genomes: comparison with those of the equine herpesviruses

Glenn F. Browning; Nino Ficorilli; M. J. Studdert

SummaryTwo previously unknown and distinct herpesviruses were isolated from donkeys. One, with the characteristics of a betaherpesvirus, was isolated from the leukocytes of an apparently healthy donkey, while the second, an alphaherpesvirus, was recovered from the nasal cavity of donkeys given high doses of corticosteroids, and caused rhinitis in two seronegative weanling donkeys when they were intranasally infected. Few, if any, restriction endonuclease fragments were shared by the donkey betaherpesvirus, equine herpesvirus 2 (EHV2) or EHV5, a second distinctly different equine betaherpesvirus, nor by the donkey alphaherpesvirus, EHV1, EHV4, or EHV3. In Southern blot analysis the donkey betaherpesvirus showed low levels of sequence similarity to both EHV2 and EHV5, while the donkey alphaherpesvirus and EHV1 shared a moderate degree of sequence similarity, less similarity with EHV4 and very low level of sequence similarity with EHV3. These two isolates appear prototypic of two previously unrecorded herpesviruses for which the names asinine herpesvirus 2 and 3 are suggested for the betaherpesvirus and the alphaherpesvirus respectively.


BMC Genomics | 2011

First complete genome sequence of infectious laryngotracheitis virus.

Sang-Won Lee; Philip F. Markham; John F. Markham; Ivonne Petermann; Amir H. Noormohammadi; Glenn F. Browning; Nino Ficorilli; Carol A. Hartley; Joanne M. Devlin

BackgroundInfectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV) is an alphaherpesvirus that causes acute respiratory disease in chickens worldwide. To date, only one complete genomic sequence of ILTV has been reported. This sequence was generated by concatenating partial sequences from six different ILTV strains. Thus, the full genomic sequence of a single (individual) strain of ILTV has not been determined previously. This study aimed to use high throughput sequencing technology to determine the complete genomic sequence of a live attenuated vaccine strain of ILTV.ResultsThe complete genomic sequence of the Serva vaccine strain of ILTV was determined, annotated and compared to the concatenated ILTV reference sequence. The genome size of the Serva strain was 152,628 bp, with a G + C content of 48%. A total of 80 predicted open reading frames were identified. The Serva strain had 96.5% DNA sequence identity with the concatenated ILTV sequence. Notably, the concatenated ILTV sequence was found to lack four large regions of sequence, including 528 bp and 594 bp of sequence in the UL29 and UL36 genes, respectively, and two copies of a 1,563 bp sequence in the repeat regions. Considerable differences in the size of the predicted translation products of 4 other genes (UL54, UL30, UL37 and UL38) were also identified. More than 530 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were identified. Most SNPs were located within three genomic regions, corresponding to sequence from the SA-2 ILTV vaccine strain in the concatenated ILTV sequence.ConclusionsThis is the first complete genomic sequence of an individual ILTV strain. This sequence will facilitate future comparative genomic studies of ILTV by providing an appropriate reference sequence for the sequence analysis of other ILTV strains.


Journal of General Virology | 2001

Equine rhinitis A virus: structural proteins and immune response.

Carol A. Hartley; Nino Ficorilli; Kemperly Dynon; Heidi E. Drummer; Jin-an Huang; M. J. Studdert

Equine rhinitis A virus (ERAV) is a picornavirus that has been reclassified as a member of the Aphthovirus genus because of its resemblance to foot-and-mouth disease virus at the level of nucleotide sequence and overall genomic structure. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of three of the four capsid proteins of ERAV was determined and showed that the proteolytic cleavage sites within the precursor P1 polypeptide occur exactly as those predicted for an aphthovirus-like 3C protease, which generates the capsid proteins VP1 and VP3. However, the autocatalytic cleavage site between VP4 and VP2, which is independent of 3C protease cleavage, was different from that predicted previously. ERAV.393/76 antisera from horses and rabbits showed different reactivity to the viral structural proteins in both serum neutralization assays and Western blots. High neutralizing antibody titres appeared to correlate with strong reactivity to VP1 in Western blots.


Journal of Virology | 2001

Evidence that Equine Rhinitis A Virus VP1 Is a Target of Neutralizing Antibodies and Participates Directly in Receptor Binding

Simone Warner; Carol A. Hartley; Rachel A. Stevenson; Nino Ficorilli; Annalisa Varrasso; M. J. Studdert; Brendan S. Crabb

ABSTRACT Equine rhinitis A virus (ERAV) is a respiratory pathogen of horses and is classified as anAphthovirus, the only non-Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) member of this genus. In FMDV, virion protein 1 (VP1) is a major target of protective antibodies and is responsible for viral attachment to permissive cells via an RGD motif located in a distal surface loop. Although both viruses share considerable sequence identity, ERAV VP1 does not contain an RGD motif. To investigate antibody and receptor-binding properties of ERAV VP1, we have expressed full-length ERAV VP1 in Escherichia coli as a glutathioneS-transferase (GST) fusion protein (GST-VP1). GST-VP1 reacted specifically with antibodies present in serum from a rabbit immunized with purified ERAV virions and also in convalescent-phase sera from horses experimentally infected with ERAV. An antiserum raised in rabbits to GST-VP1 reacted strongly with viral VP1 and effectively neutralized ERAV infection in vitro. Using a flow cytometry-based binding assay, we found that GST-VP1, but not other GST fusion proteins, bound to cell surface receptors. This binding was reduced in a dose-dependent manner by the addition of purified ERAV virions, demonstrating the specificity of this interaction. A separate cell-binding assay also implicated GST-VP1 in receptor binding. Importantly, anti-GST-VP1 antibodies inhibited the binding of ERAV virions to Vero cells, suggesting that these antibodies exert their neutralizing effect by blocking viral attachment. Thus ERAV VP1, like its counterpart in FMDV, appears to be both a target of protective antibodies and involved directly in receptor binding. This study reveals the potential of recombinant VP1 molecules to serve as vaccines and diagnostic reagents for the control of ERAV infections.


Archives of Virology | 1995

The nucleotide sequence of asinine herpesvirus 3 glycoprotein G indicates that the donkey virus is closely related to equine herpesvirus 1

Nino Ficorilli; M. J. Studdert; Brendan S. Crabb

SummaryThe nucleotide sequence of the glycoprotein G (gG) homologue of asinine herpesvirus 3 (AHV3), a respiratory alphaherpesvirus of donkeys, was determined. The AHV3 gG gene consists of 1233 base pairs (bp) and codes for a predicted protein of 411 amino acids. This is identical in size to the equine herpesvirus 1 (EHV1) gG gene and 6 amino acids longer than the equine herpesvirus 4 (EHV4) gG gene. The predicted amino acid sequence of AHV3 gG has characteristics of a class 1 membrane protein. The amino acid sequence of AHV3 gG shows 92% and 60% identity to EHV1 gG and EHV4 gG respectively. Two regions within the gG amino acid sequences of EHV1 and EHV4 were previously defined, an N-terminal constant region and an immunodominant highly variable region located toward the C-terminus. In the corresponding constant region of AHV3 gG there was 96% and 75% amino acid identity with EHV1 and EHV4 gGs respectively. In the variable region, there was 73% and 24% identity respectively. Phylogenetic analyses using the gG nucleotide sequences indicated that AHV3 is much closer in evolutionary distance to EHV1 than either virus is to EHV4. These findings provide additional support for the view that AHV3, or another closely related virus, may be the progenitor of EHV1 and has adapted to horses in relatively recent times.


Journal of Virology | 2001

Sequence Conservation and Antigenic Variation of the Structural Proteins of Equine Rhinitis A Virus

Annalisa Varrasso; Heidi E. Drummer; Jin-an Huang; Rachel A. Stevenson; Nino Ficorilli; M. J. Studdert; Carol A. Hartley

ABSTRACT The nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences of the P1 region of the genomes of 10 independent equine rhinitis A virus (ERAV) isolates were determined and found to be very closely related. A panel of seven monoclonal antibodies to the prototype virus ERAV.393/76 that bound to nonneutralization epitopes conserved among all 10 isolates was raised. In serum neutralization assays, rabbit polyclonal sera and sera from naturally and experimentally infected horses reacted in a consistent and discriminating manner with the 10 isolates, which indicated the existence of variation in the neutralization epitopes of these viruses.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Phylogenetic and molecular epidemiological studies reveal evidence of multiple past recombination events between infectious laryngotracheitis viruses.

Sang-Won Lee; Joanne M. Devlin; John F. Markham; Amir H. Noormohammadi; Glenn F. Browning; Nino Ficorilli; Carol A. Hartley; Philip F. Markham

In contrast to the RNA viruses, the genome of large DNA viruses such as herpesviruses have been considered to be relatively stable. Intra-specific recombination has been proposed as an important, but underestimated, driving force in herpesvirus evolution. Recently, two distinct field strains of infectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV) have been shown to have arisen from independent recombination events between different commercial ILTV vaccines. In this study we sequenced the genomes of additional ILTV strains and also utilized other recently updated complete genome sequences of ILTV to confirm the existence of a number of ILTV recombinants in nature. Multiple recombination events were detected in the unique long and repeat regions of the genome, but not in the unique short region. Most recombinants contained a pair of crossover points between two distinct lineages of ILTV, corresponding to the European origin and the Australian origin vaccine strains of ILTV. These results suggest that there are two distinct genotypic lineages of ILTV and that these commonly recombine in the field.


Vaccine | 2011

Comparative analysis of the complete genome sequences of two Australian origin live attenuated vaccines of infectious laryngotracheitis virus

Sang-Won Lee; Joanne M. Devlin; John F. Markham; Amir H. Noormohammadi; Glenn F. Browning; Nino Ficorilli; Carol A. Hartley; Philip F. Markham

Infectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV) is an alphaherpesvirus that causes acute respiratory disease in poultry. Live attenuated ILTV vaccines have been used extensively to help control outbreaks of disease. Two Australian-origin attenuated vaccine strains, SA2 and A20 ILTV, are commercially available and are in frequent use in Australia. Both these vaccines are of chicken embryo origin (CEO). The A20 ILTV strain was developed from the SA2 ILTV strain by sequential passage of SA2 ILTV in tissue culture in order to reduce its residual virulence. Previous studies in our laboratories have demonstrated the greater attenuation of A20 ILTV under controlled experimental conditions, but the genetic basis of the in vivo phenotypes of A20 and SA2 ILTV has not been elucidated. In this study, the genetic differences between A20 and SA2 ILTV were examined by performing complete genome sequencing and comparative analysis. The genome sequences were also compared to a reference sequence from another CEO ILTV vaccine (Serva ILTV: GenBank accession number HQ_630064) of European-origin. Additional in ovo studies to assess cell to cell spread were performed in order to allow further comparisons of the pathogenicity of SA2 and A20 ILTV. The sequencing results showed that the genome sizes of SA2 and A20 ILTV were 152,975 and 152,978bp, respectively, while Serva ILTV had a genome size of 152,630bp. The genomes of SA2 and A20 ILTV shared 99.9% nucleotide sequence identity with each other, but only 99.2% identity with Serva ILTV. In complete genome alignments between SA2 and A20 ILTV, a total of 24 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were identified, but only two of these were non-synonymous. These were located in the ORF B and UL15 genes. Four indels were detected in non-coding regions. The findings from this study demonstrate the general genetic stability of ILTV, but also show that non-synonymous changes in the ORF B and UL15 genes have arisen following tissue culture passage of SA2 ILTV to produce the A20 vaccine. It is likely that these non-synonymous changes are related to the greater attenuation of A20 ILTV compared to SA2 ILTV, and to the reduced ability of A20 ILTV to spread from cell to cell, as observed in this study. The results from this study also demonstrate the divergence between the genomes of the Australian-origin ILTV vaccine strains and the Serva vaccine strain.


BMC Microbiology | 2008

Differential expression of lipoprotein genes in Mycoplasma pneumoniae after contact with human lung epithelial cells, and under oxidative and acidic stress

Katri Hallamaa; Sen-Lin Tang; Nino Ficorilli; Glenn F. Browning

BackgroundMycoplasma pneumoniae is a human pathogen that is a common cause of community-acquired pneumonia. It harbours a large number of lipoprotein genes, most of which are of unknown function. Because of their location on the cell surface, these proteins are likely to be involved in the bacterial response to environmental changes, or in the initial stages of infection. The aim of this study was to determine if genes encoding surface lipoproteins are differentially expressed after contact with a human cell line, or after exposure to oxidative or acidic stress.ResultsUsing qRT-PCR assays, we observed that the expression of a number of lipoprotein genes was up-regulated when M. pneumoniae was placed in contact with human cells. In contrast, lipoprotein expression was generally down-regulated or unchanged when exposed to either hydrogen peroxide or low pH (5.5). When exposed to low pH, the mRNA levels of four polycistronically transcribed genes in Lipoprotein Multigene Family 6 formed a gradient of decreasing quantity with increasing distance from a predicted promoter.ConclusionThe demonstrated transcriptional changes provide evidence for the functionality of these mostly unassigned genes and indicate that they are regulated in response to changes in environmental conditions. In addition we have shown that the members of Lipoprotein Gene Family 6 may be expressed polycistronically.

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Paola K. Vaz

University of Melbourne

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Jin-an Huang

University of Melbourne

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Pam Whiteley

University of Melbourne

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