Zhiyang Ling
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by Zhiyang Ling.
Viral Immunology | 2011
Ke Xu; Zhiyang Ling; Liang Sun; Ying Xu; Chao Bian; Yuan He; Wei Lu; Ze Chen; Bing Sun
Influenza A virus is highly variable and a major viral respiratory pathogen that can cause severe illness in humans. Therefore it is important to induce a sufficient immune response specific to current strains and to heterosubtypic viruses with vaccines. In this study, we developed a dual-promoter-based bivalent DNA vaccine that encodes both hemagglutinin (HA) and nucleoprotein (NP) proteins from a highly pathogenic A/Chicken/Henan/12/2004 (H5N1) virus. Our results show that the expression levels of HA and NP genes from the dual-promoter plasmid are similar to those seen when they are expressed individually in independent plasmids. When the bivalent DNA vaccine was inoculated via intramuscular injection and in vivo electroporation, high levels of both humoral and cellular immune responses were elicited against homologous H5N1 virus and heterosubtypic H9N2 virus. Furthermore, no obvious antigenic competition was observed between HA and NP proteins in the dual-promoter-based bivalent vaccine compared to monovalent vaccines. Our data suggest that a combination of influenza surface and internal viral genes in a dual-promoter-expressing plasmid may provide a new approach for developing a DNA vaccine that may protect not only specifically against a currently circulating strain, but also may cross-protect broadly against new heterosubtypic viruses.
Virology | 2013
Weibin Hu; Aizhong Chen; Yi Miao; Shengli Xia; Zhiyang Ling; Ke Xu; Tongyan Wang; Ying Xu; Jun Cui; Hongqiang Wu; Guiyu Hu; Lin Tian; Lingling Wang; Yuelong Shu; Xiaowei Ma; Bianli Xu; Jin Zhang; Xiaojun Lin; Chao Bian; Bing Sun
Abstract Whether the 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza vaccine can induce heterosubtypic cross-protective anti-hemagglutinin (HA) neutralizing antibodies is an important issue. We obtained a panel of fully human monoclonal antibodies from the memory B cells of a 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza vaccine recipient. Most of the monoclonal antibodies targeted the HA protein but not the HA1 fragment. Among the analyzed antibodies, seven mAbs exhibited neutralizing activity against several influenza A viruses of different subtypes. The conserved linear epitope targeted by the neutralizing mAbs (FIEGGWTGMVDGWYGYHH) is part of the fusion peptide on HA2. Our work suggests that a heterosubtypic neutralizing antibody response primarily targeting the HA stem region exists in recipients of the 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza vaccine. The HA stem region contains various conserved neutralizing epitopes with the fusion peptide as an important one. This work may aid in the design of a universal influenza A virus vaccine.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Yizhuo Sun; Chao Bian; Ke Xu; Weibin Hu; Tongyan Wang; Jun Cui; Hongqiang Wu; Zhiyang Ling; Yongyong Ji; Guomei Lin; Lin Tian; Yanyan Zhou; Bingnan Li; Guiyu Hu; Ning Yu; Wenqi An; Ruowen Pan; Paul Zhou; Qibin Leng; Zhong Huang; Xiaowei Ma; Bing Sun
Background The 2009 swine-origin influenza virus (S-OIV) H1N1 pandemic has caused more than 18,000 deaths worldwide. Vaccines against the 2009 A/H1N1 influenza virus are useful for preventing infection and controlling the pandemic. The kinetics of the immune response following vaccination with the 2009 A/H1N1 influenza vaccine need further investigation. Methodology/Principal Findings 58 volunteers were vaccinated with a 2009 A/H1N1 pandemic influenza monovalent split-virus vaccine (15 µg, single-dose). The sera were collected before Day 0 (pre-vaccination) and on Days 3, 5, 10, 14, 21, 30, 45 and 60 post vaccination. Specific antibody responses induced by the vaccination were analyzed using hemagglutination inhibition (HI) assay and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). After administration of the 2009 A/H1N1 influenza vaccine, specific and protective antibody response with a major subtype of IgG was sufficiently developed as early as Day 10 (seroprotection rate: 93%). This specific antibody response could maintain for at least 60 days without significant reduction. Antibody response induced by the 2009 A/H1N1 influenza vaccine could not render protection against seasonal H1N1 influenza (seroconversion rate: 3% on Day 21). However, volunteers with higher pre-existing seasonal influenza antibody levels (pre-vaccination HI titer ≥1∶40, Group 1) more easily developed a strong antibody protection effect against the 2009 A/H1N1 influenza vaccine as compared with those showing lower pre-existing seasonal influenza antibody levels (pre-vaccination HI titer <1∶40, Group 2). The titer of the specific antibody against the 2009 A/H1N1 influenza was much higher in Group 1 (geometric mean titer: 146 on Day 21) than that in Group 2 (geometric mean titer: 70 on Day 21). Conclusions/Significance Recipients could gain sufficient protection as early as 10 days after vaccine administration. The protection could last at least 60 days. Individuals with a stronger pre-existing seasonal influenza antibody response may have a relatively higher potential for developing a stronger humoral immune response after vaccination with the 2009 A/H1N1 pandemic influenza vaccine.
Acta Biochimica et Biophysica Sinica | 2010
Chao Bian; Fang Zhang; Feng Wang; Zhiyang Ling; Min Luo; Hongqiang Wu; Yizhuo Sun; Junhui Li; Bingnan Li; Jingyan Zhu; Linna Tang; Yanyan Zhou; Qunfang Shi; Yongyong Ji; Lin Tian; Guomei Lin; Yu Fan; Niansong Wang; Bing Sun
DNA immunization is an efficient method for high-affinity monoclonal antibody generation. Here, we describe the generation of several high-quality monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against retinol-binding protein 4 (RBP4), an important marker for kidney abnormality and dysfunction, with a combination method of DNA priming and protein boost. The mAbs generated could bind to RBP4 with high sensitivity and using these mAbs, an immunocolloidal gold fast test strip was constructed. The strip can give a result in <5 min and is very sensitive with a detection limit of about 1 ng/ml. A small-scale clinical test revealed that the result of this strip was well in accordance with that of an enzyme-labeled immunosorbent assay kit currently available on the market. Consequently, it could be useful for more convenient and faster RBP4 determination in the clinic.
Nature Communications | 2016
Wenshuai Wang; Xiaoyu Sun; Yanbing Li; Jinpeng Su; Zhiyang Ling; Tianlong Zhang; Fang Wang; Hong Zhang; Hualan Chen; Jianping Ding; Bing Sun
As influenza A viruses remain a major threat to human health worldwide, the discovery of broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies that recognize conserved epitopes would facilitate the development of antibody-based therapeutic strategies. Here we report that a VH4-4-encoded human mAb named 3E1 could neutralize H1 and H5 subtype viruses in vitro and protect mice against the H1N1 and H5N6 viruses by inhibiting the low pH-induced conformational rearrangement of haemagglutinin (HA), hence blocking membrane fusion. The crystal structures of 3E1 Fab in complex with HA of two H1N1 strains reveal that 3E1, with both heavy and light chains, binds to a conserved epitope of the HA stem region, comprising parts of the fusion peptide, the F subdomain and the outermost β-strand preceding helix A. Altogether, these data suggest the potential of 3E1 as a therapeutic drug against H1 and H5 subtype viruses.
International Journal of Impact Engineering | 2012
Xingxu Huang; Zhiyang Ling; Z.D. Liu; Haifei Zhang; L.H. Dai
International Journal of Solids and Structures | 2013
Xingxu Huang; Zhiyang Ling; L.H. Dai
Archive | 2011
Bing Sun; Zhiyang Ling; Jingyan Zhu; Hongqiang Wu; Linna Tang; Bingnan Li; Qunfang Shi
Archive | 2011
Bing Sun; Xiao Huang; Chao Bian; Zhiyang Ling; Cui Jun; Hongqiang Wu; Yizhuo Sun; Guiyu Hu
Archive | 2011
Bing Sun; Zhiyang Ling; Jingyan Zhu; Hongqiang Wu; Linna Tang; Bingnan Li; Qunfang Shi