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Poxviruses such as monkeypox virus (MPXV) are emerging zoonotic diseases. Compared to MPXV, Vaccinia virus (VACV) has reduced pathogenicity in humans and can be used as a partially protective vaccine against MPXV. While most orthopoxviruses have E3 protein homologues with highly similar N-termini, the MPXV homologue, F3, has a start

Poxviruses such as monkeypox virus (MPXV) are emerging zoonotic diseases. Compared to MPXV, Vaccinia virus (VACV) has reduced pathogenicity in humans and can be used as a partially protective vaccine against MPXV. While most orthopoxviruses have E3 protein homologues with highly similar N-termini, the MPXV homologue, F3, has a start codon mutation leading to an N-terminal truncation of 37 amino acids. The VACV protein E3 consists of a dsRNA binding domain in its C-terminus which must be intact for pathogenicity in murine models and replication in cultured cells. The N-terminus of E3 contains a Z-form nucleic acid (ZNA) binding domain and is also required for pathogenicity in murine models. Poxviruses produce RNA transcripts that extend beyond the transcribed gene which can form double-stranded RNA (dsRNA). The innate immune system easily recognizes dsRNA through proteins such as protein kinase R (PKR). After comparing a vaccinia virus with a wild-type E3 protein (VACV WT) to one with an E3 N-terminal truncation of 37 amino acids (VACV E3Δ37N), phenotypic differences appeared in several cell lines. In HeLa cells and certain murine embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs), dsRNA recognition pathways such as PKR become activated during VACV E3Δ37N infections, unlike VACV WT. However, MPXV does not activate PKR in HeLa or MEF cells. Additional investigation determined that MPXV produces less dsRNA than VACV. VACV E3Δ37N was made more similar to MPXV by selecting mutants that produce less dsRNA. By producing less dsRNA, VACV E3Δ37N no longer activated PKR in HeLa or MEF cells, thus restoring the wild-type phenotype. Furthermore, in other cell lines such as L929 (also a murine fibroblast) VACV E3Δ37N, but not VACV WT infection leads to activation of DNA-dependent activator of IFN-regulatory factors (DAI) and induction of necroptotic cell death. The same low dsRNA mutants demonstrate that DAI activation and necroptotic induction is independent of classical dsRNA. Finally, investigations of spread in an animal model and replication in cell lines where both the PKR and DAI pathways are intact determined that inhibition of both pathways is required for VACV E3Δ37N to replicate.
ContributorsCotsmire, Samantha (Author) / Jacobs, Bertram L (Thesis advisor) / Varsani, Arvind (Committee member) / Hogue, Brenda (Committee member) / Haydel, Shelley (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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DescriptionA
ContributorsLund, Michael (Author) / Varsani, Arvind (Thesis advisor) / Upham, Nathan (Committee member) / Harris, Robin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Precise modulation of gene expression is essential for proper tissue and cell-specific differentiation and function. Multiple distinct post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms, such as miRNA (microRNA)-based regulation and alternative polyadenylation (APA), are an intrinsic part of this modulation and orchestrate intricate pathways to achieve and maintain balanced gene expression.MiRNA-based regulation and APA

Precise modulation of gene expression is essential for proper tissue and cell-specific differentiation and function. Multiple distinct post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms, such as miRNA (microRNA)-based regulation and alternative polyadenylation (APA), are an intrinsic part of this modulation and orchestrate intricate pathways to achieve and maintain balanced gene expression.MiRNA-based regulation and APA function through sequence motifs located in the 3’ Untranslated Region (3’UTR) of mRNA transcripts. MiRNAs are short (~22 nt) non-coding RNA molecules that bind target sequences within the 3’UTR of an mRNA transcript, inhibiting its translation or promoting its degradation. APA occurs during RNA transcription termination and leads to the preparation of mature mRNAs with different 3’UTR lengths, allowing shorter 3’UTRs to bypass miRNA regulation. In addition to these two post-transcriptional forms of regulation, co-transcriptional mechanisms such as alternative RNA splicing, which produces distinct gene products from a precursor mRNA, are also important in controlling gene expression. While miRNA-based regulation, APA, and alternative RNA splicing are important regulatory mechanisms, there is a lack of comprehensive understanding of how they interact and communicate with each other. This thesis studies these three forms of gene regulation in the nematode C. elegans, with the goal of extracting rules and mechanisms used by each of them in development to establish and maintain somatic tissue identity. After isolating miRNA targets in multiple C. elegans somatic tissues, it was found that miRNAs can modulate the abundance of hnRNPs and SR proteins, which are known to control alternative RNA splicing in a dosage-dependent manner.To identify tissue-specific miRNAs, a nuclear fluorescent cell sorting (FACS)-based methodology named Nuc-Seq, was developed to isolate and sequence tissue-specific miRNAs from body muscle tissue. Nuc-Seq identified 2,848 muscle-specific protein-coding genes and 16 body muscle-specific miRNAs. This data was used to develop a high-quality body muscle-specific miRNA-APA Interactome which allows studies in regulatory processes in detail. Taken together, this work highlights some of the complexity of pre- and post-transcriptional gene regulation and sheds light on how miRNA-based regulation, APA, and alternative RNA splicing are interconnected and are responsible for the establishment and maintenance of tissue identity.
ContributorsSchorr, Anna L (Author) / Mangone, Marco (Thesis advisor) / Harris, Robin (Committee member) / Sharma, Shalini (Committee member) / Varsani, Arvind (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Scientists are entrusted with developing novel molecular strategies for effective prophylactic and therapeutic interventions. Antivirals are indispensable tools that can be targeted at viral domains directly or at cellular domains indirectly to obstruct viral infections and reduce pathogenicity. Despite their transformative potential in healthcare, to date, antivirals have been clinically

Scientists are entrusted with developing novel molecular strategies for effective prophylactic and therapeutic interventions. Antivirals are indispensable tools that can be targeted at viral domains directly or at cellular domains indirectly to obstruct viral infections and reduce pathogenicity. Despite their transformative potential in healthcare, to date, antivirals have been clinically approved to treat only 10 out of the greater than 200 known pathogenic human viruses. Additionally, as obligate intracellular parasites, many virus functions are intimately coupled with host cellular processes. As such, the development of a clinically relevant antiviral is challenged by the limited number of clear targets per virus and necessitates an extensive insight into these molecular processes. Compounding this challenge, many viral pathogens have evolved to evade effective antivirals. Therefore, a means to develop virus- or strain-specific antivirals without detailed insight into each idiosyncratic biochemical mechanism may aid in the development of antivirals against a larger swath of pathogens. Such an approach will tremendously benefit from having the specific molecular recognition of viral species as the lowest barrier. Here, I modify a nanobody (anti-green fluorescent protein) that specifically recognizes non-essential epitopes (glycoprotein M-pHluorin chimera) presented on the extra virion surface of a virus (Pseudorabies virus strain 486). The nanobody switches from having no inhibitory properties (tested up to 50 μM) to ∼3 nM IC50 in in vitro infectivity assays using porcine kidney (PK15) cells. The nanobody modifications use highly reliable bioconjugation to a three-dimensional wireframe deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) origami scaffold. Mechanistic studies suggest that inhibition is mediated by the DNA origami scaffold bound to the virus particle, which obstructs the internalization of the viruses into cells, and that inhibition is enhanced by avidity resulting from multivalent virus and scaffold interactions. The assembled nanostructures demonstrate negligible cytotoxicity (<10 nM) and sufficient stability, further supporting their therapeutic potential. If translatable to other viral species and epitopes, this approach may open a new strategy that leverages existing infrastructures – monoclonal antibody development, phage display, and in vitro evolution - for rapidly developing novel antivirals in vivo.
ContributorsPradhan, Swechchha (Author) / Hariadi, Rizal (Thesis advisor) / Hogue, Ian (Committee member) / Varsani, Arvind (Committee member) / Chen, Qiang (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Following the journey through the sewerage system, wastewater is subject to a series of purification procedures, prior to water reuse and disposal of the resultant sewage sludge. Biosolids, also known as treated sewage sludge, deemed fit for application on land, is a nutrient-rich, semisolid byproduct of biological wastewater treatment.

Following the journey through the sewerage system, wastewater is subject to a series of purification procedures, prior to water reuse and disposal of the resultant sewage sludge. Biosolids, also known as treated sewage sludge, deemed fit for application on land, is a nutrient-rich, semisolid byproduct of biological wastewater treatment. Technological progression in metagenomics has allowed for large-scale analysis of complex viral communities in a number of samples, including wastewater. Members of the Microviridae family are non-enveloped, ssDNA bacteriophages, and are known to infect enterobacteria. Members of the Genomoviridae family similarly are non-enveloped, ssDNA viruses, but are presumed to infect fungi rather than eubacteria. As these two families of viruses are not relatively documented and their diversity poorly classified, this study aimed to analyze the presence of genomoviruses and the diversity of microviruses in nine samples representative of wastewater in Arizona and other regions of the United States. Using a metagenomic approach, the nucleic acids of genomoviruses and microviruses were isolated, assembled into complete genomes, and characterized through visual analysis: a heat chart showing percent coverage for genomoviruses and a circular phylogenetic tree showing diversity of microviruses. The heat map results for the genomoviruses showed a large presence of 99 novel sequences in all nine wastewater samples. Additionally, the 535 novel microviruses displayed great diversity in the cladogram, both in terms of sub-family and isolation source. Further research should be conducted in order to classify the taxonomy of microviruses and the diversity of genomoviruses. Finally, this study suggests future exploration of the viral host, prior to entering the wastewater system.
ContributorsSchreck, Joshua Reuben (Author) / Varsani, Arvind (Thesis director) / Rolf, Halden (Committee member) / Misra, Rajeev (Committee member) / School of Film, Dance and Theatre (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2020-05
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Description
Arachnids belong to the phylum Arthropoda, the largest phylum in the animal kingdom. Ticks are blood-feeding arachnids that vector numerous pathogens of significant medical and veterinary importance, while scorpions have become a common concern in urban desert cities due to the high level of toxicity in their venom. To date,

Arachnids belong to the phylum Arthropoda, the largest phylum in the animal kingdom. Ticks are blood-feeding arachnids that vector numerous pathogens of significant medical and veterinary importance, while scorpions have become a common concern in urban desert cities due to the high level of toxicity in their venom. To date, viruses associated with arachnids have been under sampled and understudied. Here viral metagenomics was used to explore the diversity of viruses present in ticks and scorpions. American dog ticks (Dermacentor variabilis) and blacklegged ticks (Ixodes scapularis) were collected in Pennsylvania while one hairy scorpion (Hadrurus arizonensis) and four bark scorpions (Centruroides sculpturatus) were collected in Phoenix. Novel viral genomes described here belong to the families Polyomaviridae, Anelloviridae, Genomoviridae, and a newly proposed family, Arthropolviridae.

Polyomaviruses are non-enveloped viruses with a small, circular double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) genomes that have been identified in a variety of mammals, birds and fish and are known to cause various diseases. Arthropolviridae is a proposed family of circular, large tumor antigen encoding dsDNA viruses that have a unidirectional genome organization. Genomoviruses and anelloviruses are ssDNA viruses that have circular genomes ranging in size from 2–2.4 kb and 2.1–3.8 kb, respectively. Genomoviruses are ubiquitous in the environment, having been identified in a wide range of animal, plant and environmental samples, while anelloviruses have been associated with a plethora of animals.

Here, 16 novel viruses are reported that span four viral families. Eight novel polyomaviruses were recovered from bark scorpions, three arthropolviruses were recovered from dog ticks and one arthropolvirus from a hairy scorpion. Viruses belonging to the families Polyomaviridae and Arthropolviridae are highly divergent. This is the first more extensive study of these viruses in arachnids. Three genomoviruses were recovered from both dog and deer ticks and one anellovirus was recovered from deer ticks, which are the first records of these viruses being recovered from ticks. This work highlights the diversity of dsDNA and ssDNA viruses in the arachnid population and emphasizes the importance of performing viral surveys on these populations.
ContributorsSchmidlin, Kara (Author) / Varsani, Arvind (Thesis advisor) / Van Doorslaer, Koenraad (Committee member) / Stenglein, Mark (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019