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    Modulating Influenza and Heparin Binding Viruses’ Pathogenesis with Extrinsic Receptor Decoy Liposomes: A Dissertation

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    Authors
    Hendricks, Gabriel L.
    Faculty Advisor
    Robert Finberg, MD
    Academic Program
    Immunology and Microbiology
    UMass Chan Affiliations
    Medicine
    Document Type
    Doctoral Dissertation
    Publication Date
    2013-06-28
    Keywords
    Influenza A virus
    Influenza Vaccines
    Liposomes
    Molecular Targeted Therapy
    Decoy drugs
    Decoy liposomes
    Immunity
    Immunology of Infectious Disease
    Immunopathology
    Immunoprophylaxis and Therapy
    Influenza Virus Vaccines
    Virology
    Virus Diseases
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    Abstract
    Influenza is a severe disease in humans and animals, causing upwards of 40,000 deaths every year in America alone. Influenza A virus (IAV) also causes periodic pandemics every 10 to 50 years, killing millions of people. Despite this, very few effective therapies are available. All strains of IAV are prone to developing resistance to antibodies due to the high mutation rate in the viral genome. Because of this mutation rate, a yearly vaccine must be generated before every flu season, and efficacy varies year to year. IAV has also mutated to escape several of the clinically-approved small molecule inhibitors. A therapeutic agent that targets a highly conserved region of the virus could bypass resistance and also be effective against multiple strains of IAV. IAV attachment is mediated by many individually weak hemagglutinin–sialic acid interactions that all together make a strong attachment to a host cell. Polymerized sialic acid analogs can recreate these interactions and block infection. However, they are not ideal therapeutics due to solubility issues and in vivo toxicity. We used liposomes as a novel means for delivery of the sialic acid-containing glycan, sialylneolacto-N-tetraose c (LSTc). LSTcbearing decoy liposomes form multivalent, polymer-like interactions with IAV. Decoy liposomes competitively bind IAV in hemagglutination inhibition assays and inhibit infection of target cells in a dose-dependent manner. LSTc decoy liposomes co-localize with IAV, while control liposomes do not. Inhibition is specific, as inhibition of Sendai virus and respiratory syncytial virus is not observed. In contrast, monovalent LSTc does not bind IAV or inhibit infectivity. LSTc decoy liposomes prevent the spread of IAV during multiple rounds of replication in vitro and extend survival of mice challenged with a lethal dose of virus. Considering the conservation of the hemagglutinin binding pocket and the ability of decoy liposomes to form high-avidity interactions with IAV hemagglutinin, our decoy liposomes have potential as a new therapeutic agent against emerging strains.
    DOI
    10.13028/M2V319
    Permanent Link to this Item
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/32028
    Rights
    Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved.
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.13028/M2V319
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    Morningside Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences Dissertations and Theses

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