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Dive into the research topics where Vikram N. Vakharia is active.

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Featured researches published by Vikram N. Vakharia.


Journal of Virology | 2001

Molecular Determinants of Virulence, Cell Tropism, and Pathogenic Phenotype of Infectious Bursal Disease Virus

Meggin Brandt; Kun Yao; Meihong Liu; Robert A. Heckert; Vikram N. Vakharia

ABSTRACT Infectious bursal disease viruses (IBDVs), belonging to the familyBirnaviridae, exhibit a wide range of immunosuppressive potential, pathogenicity, and virulence for chickens. The genomic segment A encodes all the structural (VP2, VP4, and VP3) and nonstructural proteins, whereas segment B encodes the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (VP1). To identify the molecular determinants for the virulence, pathogenic phenotype, and cell tropism of IBDV, we prepared full-length cDNA clones of a virulent strain, Irwin Moulthrop (IM), and constructed several chimeric cDNA clones of segments A and B between the attenuated vaccine strain (D78) and the virulent IM or GLS variant strain. Using the cRNA-based reverse-genetics system developed for IBDV, we generated five chimeric viruses after transfection by electroporation procedures in Vero or chicken embryo fibroblast (CEF) cells, one of which was recovered after propagation in embryonated eggs. To evaluate the characteristics of the recovered viruses in vivo, we inoculated 3-week-old chickens with D78, IM, GLS, or chimeric viruses and analyzed their bursae for pathological lesions 3 days postinfection. Viruses in which VP4, VP4-VP3, and VP1 coding sequences of the virulent strain IM were substituted for the corresponding region in the vaccine strain failed to induce hemorrhagic lesions in the bursa. In contrast, viruses in which the VP2 coding region of the vaccine strain was replaced with the variant GLS or virulent IM strain caused rapid bursal atrophy or hemorrhagic lesions in the bursa, as seen with the variant or classical virulent strain, respectively. These results show that the virulence and pathogenic-phenotype markers of IBDV reside in VP2. Moreover, one of the chimeric viruses containing VP2 sequences of the virulent strain could not be recovered in Vero or CEF cells but was recovered in embryonated eggs, suggesting that VP2 contains the determinants for cell tropism. Similarly, one of the chimeric viruses containing the VP1 segment of the virulent strain could not be recovered in Vero cells but was recovered in CEF cells, suggesting that VP1 contains the determinants for cell-specific replication in Vero cells. By comparing the deduced amino acid sequences of the D78 and IM strains and their reactivities with monoclonal antibody 21, which binds specifically to virulent IBDV, the putative amino acids involved in virulence and cell tropism were identified. Our results indicate that residues Gln at position 253 (Gln253), Asp279, and Ala284 of VP2 are involved in the virulence, cell tropism, and pathogenic phenotype of virulent IBDV.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Molecular Determinants of Infectious Pancreatic Necrosis Virus Virulence and Cell Culture Adaptation

Haichen Song; Nina Santi; Øystein Evensen; Vikram N. Vakharia

ABSTRACT Infectious pancreatic necrosis viruses (IPNVs) exhibit a wide range of virulence in salmonid species. In previous studies, we have shown that the amino acid residues at positions 217 and 221 in VP2 are implicated in virulence. To pinpoint the molecular determinants of virulence in IPNV, we generated recombinant IPNV strains using the cRNA-based reverse-genetics system. In two virulent strains, residues at positions 217 and 247 were replaced by the corresponding amino acids of a low-virulence strain. The growth characteristics of the recovered chimeric strains in cell culture were similar to the low-virulence strains, and these viruses induced significantly lower mortality in Atlantic salmon fry than the parent strains did in in vivo challenge studies. Furthermore, the virulent strain was serially passaged in CHSE-214 cells 10 times and was completely characterized by nucleotide sequencing. Deduced amino acid sequence analyses revealed a single amino acid substitution of Ala to Thr at position 221 in VP2 of this virus, which became highly attenuated and induced 15% cumulative mortality in Atlantic salmon fry, compared to 68% mortality induced by the virulent parent strain. The attenuated strain grows to higher titers in CHSE cells and can be distinguished antigenically from the wild-type virus by use of a monoclonal antibody. However, the virulent strain passaged 10 times in RTG-2 cells was stable, and it retained its antigenicity and virulence. Our results indicate that residues Thr at position 217 (Thr217) and Ala221 of VP2 are the major determinants of virulence in IPNV of the Sp serotype. Highly virulent isolates possess residues Thr217 and Ala221; moderate- to low-virulence strains have Pro217 and Ala221; and strains containing Thr221 are almost avirulent, irrespective of the residue at position 217.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

The structure of a birnavirus polymerase reveals a distinct active site topology.

Junhua Pan; Vikram N. Vakharia; Yizhi Jane Tao

Single-subunit polymerases are universally encoded in both cellular organisms and viruses. Their three-dimensional structures have the shape of a right-hand with the active site located in the palm region, which has a topology similar to that of the RNA recognition motif (RRM) found in many RNA-binding proteins. Considering that polymerases have well conserved structures, it was surprising that the RNA-dependent RNA polymerases from birnaviruses, a group of dsRNA viruses, have their catalytic motifs arranged in a permuted order in sequence. Here we report the 2.5 Å structure of a birnavirus VP1 in which the polymerase palm subdomain adopts a new active site topology that has not been previously observed in other polymerases. In addition, the polymerase motif C of VP1 has the sequence of -ADN-, a highly unusual feature for RNA-dependent polymerases. Through site-directed mutagenesis, we have shown that changing the VP1 motif C from -ADN- to -GDD- results in a mutant with an increased RNA synthesis activity. Our results indicate that the active site topology of VP1 may represent a newly developed branch in polymerase evolution, and that birnaviruses may have acquired the -ADN- mutation to control their growth rate.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Infectious Pancreatic Necrosis Virus VP5 Is Dispensable for Virulence and Persistence

Nina Santi; Haichen Song; Vikram N. Vakharia; Øystein Evensen

ABSTRACT Infectious pancreatic necrosis virus (IPNV) is the causative agent of infectious pancreatic necrosis (IPN) disease in salmonid fish. Recent studies have revealed variation in virulence between isolates of the Sp serotype, associated with certain residues of the structural protein VP2. The isolates are also highly heterogenic in the coding region of the nonstructural VP5 protein. To study the involvement of this protein in the pathogenesis of disease, we generated three recombinant VP5 mutant viruses using reverse genetics. The “wild-type” recombinant NVI15 (rNVI15) virus is virulent, having a premature stop codon at nucleotide position 427, putatively encoding a truncated 12-kDa VP5 protein, whereas rNVI15-15K virus encodes a 15-kDa protein. Recombinant rNVI15-ΔVP5 virus contains a mutation in the initiation codon of the VP5 gene that ablates the expression of VP5. Atlantic salmon postsmolts were challenged to study the virulence characteristics of the recovered viruses in vivo. The role of VP5 in persistent infection was investigated by challenging Atlantic salmon fry with the recovered viruses, as well as with the low-virulence field strain Sp103 and a naturally occurring VP5-deficient mutant of Sp103. The results show that VP5 is not required for viral replication in vivo, and its absence does not alter the virulence characteristics of the virus or the establishment of persistent IPNV infection.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Nonstructural Protein of Infectious Bursal Disease Virus Inhibits Apoptosis at the Early Stage of Virus Infection

Meihong Liu; Vikram N. Vakharia

ABSTRACT Infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV), the causative agent of a highly contagious disease in chickens, carries a small nonstructural protein (NS). This protein has been implicated to play a role in the induction of apoptosis. In this study, we investigate the kinetics of viral replication during a single round of viral replication and examine the mechanism of IBDV-induced apoptosis. Our results show that it is caspase dependent and activates caspases 3 and 9. Nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) is also activated and is required for IBDV-induced apoptosis. The NF-κB inhibitor MG132 completely inhibited IBDV-induced DNA fragmentation, caspase 3 activation, and NF-κB activation. To study the function of the NS protein in this context, we generated the recombinant rGLS virus and an NS knockout mutant, rGLSNSΔ virus, using reverse genetics. Comparisons of the replication kinetics and markers for virally induced apoptosis indicated that the NS knockout mutant virus induces earlier and increased DNA fragmentation, caspase activity, and NF-κB activation. These results suggest that the NS protein has an antiapoptotic function at the early stage of virus infection.


Journal of Virology | 2000

Possible Involvement of the Double-Stranded RNA-Binding Core Protein ςA in the Resistance of Avian Reovirus to Interferon

José Martínez-Costas; Claudia González-López; Vikram N. Vakharia; Javier Benavente

ABSTRACT Treatment of primary cultures of chicken embryo fibroblasts with a recombinant chicken alpha/beta interferon (rcIFN) induces an antiviral state that causes a strong inhibition of vaccinia virus and vesicular stomatitis virus replication but has no effect on avian reovirus S1133 replication. The fact that avian reovirus polypeptides are synthesized normally in rcIFN-treated cells prompted us to investigate whether this virus expresses factors that interfere with the activation and/or the activity of the IFN-induced, double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)-dependent enzymes. Our results demonstrate that extracts of avian-reovirus-infected cells, but not those of uninfected cells, are able to relieve the translation-inhibitory activity of dsRNA in reticulocyte lysates, by blocking the activation of the dsRNA-dependent enzymes. In addition, our results show that protein ςA, an S1133 core polypeptide, binds to dsRNA in an irreversible manner and that clearing this protein from extracts of infected cells abolishes their protranslational capacity. Taken together, our results raise the interesting possibility that protein ςA antagonizes the IFN-induced cellular response against avian reovirus by blocking the intracellular activation of enzyme pathways dependent on dsRNA, as has been suggested for several other viral dsRNA-binding proteins.


Journal of Virology | 2011

Nonvirion Protein of Novirhabdovirus Suppresses Apoptosis at the Early Stage of Virus Infection

Arun Ammayappan; Vikram N. Vakharia

ABSTRACT Viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV) and infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) are members of the genus Novirhabdovirus within the Rhabdoviridae family, which can cause severe hemorrhagic disease in fresh- and saltwater fish worldwide. These viruses carry an additional nonvirion (NV) gene, which codes for the nonstructural NV protein that has been implicated to play a role in viral pathogenesis. To determine the precise biological function of this NV gene and its gene product, we generated NV-deficient and NV knockout recombinant VHSVs, using reverse genetics. Comparisons of the replication kinetics and markers for virus-induced apoptosis indicated that the NV-deficient and NV knockout mutant viruses induce apoptosis earlier in cell culture than the wild-type recombinant VHSV. These results suggest that the NV protein has an antiapoptotic function at the early stage of virus infection. Furthermore, we created a chimeric VHSV, in which the NV gene of VHSV was replaced by the IHNV NV gene, which was capable of suppressing apoptosis in cell culture. These results show that the NV protein of other members of Novirhabdovirus can restore the NV protein function. In this study, we also investigated the kinetics of VHSV replication during a single round of viral replication and examined the mechanism of VHSV-induced apoptosis. Our results show that VHSV infection induced caspases 3, 8 and 9 in cell culture.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

The crystal structure and RNA-binding of an orthomyxovirus nucleoprotein.

Wenjie Zheng; John S. Olson; Vikram N. Vakharia; Yizhi Jane Tao

Genome packaging for viruses with segmented genomes is often a complex problem. This is particularly true for influenza viruses and other orthomyxoviruses, whose genome consists of multiple negative-sense RNAs encapsidated as ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes. To better understand the structural features of orthomyxovirus RNPs that allow them to be packaged, we determined the crystal structure of the nucleoprotein (NP) of a fish orthomyxovirus, the infectious salmon anemia virus (ISAV) (genus Isavirus). As the major protein component of the RNPs, ISAV-NP possesses a bi-lobular structure similar to the influenza virus NP. Because both RNA-free and RNA-bound ISAV NP forms stable dimers in solution, we were able to measure the NP RNA binding affinity as well as the stoichiometry using recombinant proteins and synthetic oligos. Our RNA binding analysis revealed that each ISAV-NP binds ∼12 nts of RNA, shorter than the 24–28 nts originally estimated for the influenza A virus NP based on population average. The 12-nt stoichiometry was further confirmed by results from electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering. Considering that RNPs of ISAV and the influenza viruses have similar morphologies and dimensions, our findings suggest that NP-free RNA may exist on orthomyxovirus RNPs, and selective RNP packaging may be accomplished through direct RNA-RNA interactions.


Developmental and Comparative Immunology | 2016

The zebrafish galectins Drgal1-L2 and Drgal3-L1 bind in vitro to the infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) glycoprotein and reduce viral adhesion to fish epithelial cells

Mihai Nita-Lazar; Justin Mancini; Chiguang Feng; Nuria Gonzalez-Montalban; Chinnarajan Ravindran; Shawn Jackson; Ana de las Heras-Sánchez; Barbara Giomarelli; Hafiz Ahmed; Stuart M. Haslam; Gang Wu; Anne Dell; Arun Ammayappan; Vikram N. Vakharia; Gerardo R. Vasta

The infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV; Rhabdoviridae, Novirhabdovirus) infects teleost fish, such as salmon and trout, and is responsible for significant losses in the aquaculture industry and in wild fish populations. Although IHNV enters the host through the skin at the base of the fins, the viral adhesion and entry mechanisms are not fully understood. In recent years, evidence has accumulated in support of the key roles played by protein-carbohydrate interactions between host lectins secreted to the extracellular space and virion envelope glycoproteins in modulating viral adhesion and infectivity. In this study, we assessed in vitro the potential role(s) of zebrafish (Danio rerio) proto type galectin-1 (Drgal1-L2) and a chimera galectin-3 (Drgal3-L1) in IHNV adhesion to epithelial cells. Our results suggest that the extracellular Drgal1-L2 and Drgal3-L1 interact directly and in a carbohydrate-dependent manner with the IHNV glycosylated envelope and glycans on the epithelial cell surface, significantly reducing viral adhesion.


Developmental and Comparative Immunology | 2012

Immune responses elicited in rainbow trout through the administration of infectious pancreatic necrosis virus-like particles.

S. Martinez-Alonso; Vikram N. Vakharia; Sylvia Rodríguez Saint-Jean; Sara I. Pérez-Prieto; Carolina Tafalla

Virus like particles (VLPs) against viral pathogens not only constitute a novel approach for the development of antiviral vaccines for an specific virus, but also for the creation of multivalent vaccines in which antigens from other pathogens may be expressed on the surface of these VLPs. Despite positive results on protection for many of these VLPs in both fish and mammals, not many studies have focused on the immune response triggered by these particles; studies that may provide hints for the identification of immune mechanisms responsible for antiviral protection, which are mostly unknown in fish. In the current work, we have studied the levels of transcription of several immune genes in the spleen of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) intraperitoneally injected with VLPs from infectious pancreatic necrosis virus (IPNV) focusing on the chemokine response as well as the response of genes related to interferon (IFN) production. Surprisingly, the capacity of VLPs to induce chemokines differed from that of live IPNV, suggesting a direct effect of viral replication on the chemokine response in this organ. While VLPs up-regulated the transcription of CK3, CK10 and CXCd and down-modulated CK5B, CK6 and CK9 transcription, a previous study in which the transcription of γIP, CXCd, CK1, CK3, CK5B, CK6, CK7A, CK9 and CK12 had been studied demonstrated that IPNV only significantly up-regulated CK6 and down-modulated CK3 in the spleen. On the other hand, the administration of VLPs produced a strong mobilization to the peritoneum of CD4(+), IgM(+), IgT(+) and CD83(+) leukocytes similar to that induced by the live viral infection. In both cases, this leukocyte recruitment seemed to be greatly mediated through CK3, CK5B, CK9 and CK10 chemokine production. These results together with the fact that VLPs strongly induced non-specific lymphocyte proliferation and specific anti-IPNV antibody production point to VLPs as excellent candidates for vaccine development.

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Sohini Dey

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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Madhan Mohan Chellappa

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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Øystein Evensen

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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Dinesh C. Pathak

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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Satish S. Gaikwad

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

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Hafiz Ahmed

University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute

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Kun Yao

University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute

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