Publication | Open Access
Increased expression in vivo and in vitro of foreign genes directed by A-type inclusion body hybrid promoters in recombinant vaccinia viruses
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Citations
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References
1991
Year
Viral ReplicationSynthetic VirologyGeneticsImmunologyViral Structural ProteinHybrid PromoterVaccine TargetRecombinant Vaccinia VirusesVirus GeneViral GeneticsVirologyRecombinant Vaccinia VirusVaccinia VirusVaccinationForeign GenesMolecular VirologyPathogenesisVaccine DesignSystems BiologyMedicine
We constructed A-type inclusion body (ATI) hybrid promoters, that is, late ATI promoters followed by tandemly repeated early regions of the promoter for the 7.5-kDa protein (the 7.5-kDa promoter). The repetition of the whole early promoter sequence of the 7.5-kDa gene, including the upstream consensus sequence and initiation region, efficiently increased the early expression of the bacterial chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene in recombinant vaccinia virus. Recombinant vaccinia virus could express influenza virus hemagglutinin via the hybrid promoter more efficiently, induced higher levels of neutralizing antibody and cytotoxic T lymphocytes, and consequently protected mice more efficiently against challenge with influenza virus than did recombinant vaccinia virus containing the widely used 7.5-kDa promoter.
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