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Article Abstract

Bas-Congo virus (BASV) is a novel rhabdovirus recently identified from a patient with acute hemorrhagic fever in the Bas-Congo province of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Here we show that the BASV glycoprotein (BASV-G) can be successfully used to pseudotype glycoprotein-deficient vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), allowing studies of BASV-G-driven membrane fusion and viral entry into target cells without replication-competent virus. BASV-G displayed broad tissue and species tropism in vitro, and BASV-G-mediated membrane fusion was pH dependent. The conformational changes induced in BASV-G by acidification were fully reversible and did not lead to inactivation of the viral fusion protein. Our data combined with comparative sequence similarity analyses suggest that BASV-G shares structural and functional features with other rhabdovirus glycoproteins and falls into the group of class III viral fusion proteins. However, activation of BASV-G-driven fusion required a lower pH and higher temperatures than did VSV-G-mediated fusion. Moreover, in contrast to VSV-G, mature BASV-G in VSV pseudotypes consists of a mixture of high-mannose and complex glycans that enables it to bind to certain C-type lectins, thereby enhancing its attachment to target cells. Taken together, the results presented in this study will facilitate future investigations of BASV-G-mediated cell entry and its inhibition in the absence of an infectious cell culture assay for BASV and at lower biosafety levels. Moreover, serology testing based on BASV-G pseudotype neutralization can be used to uncover the prevalence and importance of BASV as a potential novel human pathogen in the DRC and throughout Central Africa.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3754090PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01183-13DOI Listing

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The Bas-Congo virus (BASV) is a novel rhabdovirus that causes viral hemorrhagic fever in 2009. Since BASV has not been isolated, there is limited information on BASV, and potential therapeutics or vaccines have not yet been developed. In the present study, we used the synthetic cDNA of the BASV-G protein to develop 4 different types of vaccine, using a recombinant BASV-G protein, a plasmid DNA that expresses the BASV-G protein, a recombinant vaccinia virus that expresses the BASV-G protein, and a pseudotype virus based on hydrogen peroxide-inactivated vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) that expresses the BASV-G protein (BASVpv).

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Article Synopsis
  • Tibroviruses are a newly identified group of rhabdoviruses found in humans, cattle, and arthropods, including four known strains that infect humans: BASV, EKV-1, EKV-2, and Mundri virus, but their biological properties remain largely uncharted due to the lack of isolation.* -
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Background: Bas-Congo virus (BASV), an emerging tibrovirus, was associated with an outbreak of acute haemorrhagic fever in Mangala, Democratic Republic of the Congo, in 2009. In 2012, neutralising antibodies to BASV were detected in the lone survivor and one of his close contacts. However, subsequent serological and molecular surveys were unsuccessful as neither BASV antibodies nor its RNA were detected.

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