Qinfang Liu, Shuai Wang, Guangpeng Ma, Juan Pu, Nicole E Forbes, Earl G Brown and Jin-Hua Liu
Typical reverse genetics systems for generating influenza viruses require the insertion of each genome segments by DNA ligation into vectors for genome synthesis and expression. Herein is described the construction and use of a novel pair of plasmid vectors for cloning all eight genome segments of influenza A virus by homologous recombination for influenza virus reverse genetics. Plasmids, pLLBA and pLLBG, were constructed to possess opposing RNA polymerase I and RNA polymerase II transcription units for generating influenza genomic and messenger RNAs, respectively. In addition these promoters flanked a recombination cassette which comprised the conserved 5’ (13bp) and 3’ (12bp) terminal promoters of influenza virus. These vectors differed due to the presence of an A or a G (plus sense) to correspond to differences at nucleotide position 4 among negative-sense influenza virus promoters. The cloning approach involved homologous recombination of each influenza gene segment and the appropriate linearized pLLBA or pLLBG vectors in E. coli. Direct cloning by recombination was simpler and faster than conventional restriction digestion and ligation methods. This new vector system was successfully used to clone and rescue various influenza viruses and thus has the potential to promote the rapid analysis and vaccine development of novel influenza strains.
PDFShare this article
Molecular and Genetic Medicine received 3919 citations as per Google Scholar report