The XVIII International Parvovirus Workshop Rimini, Italy, 14–17 June 2022
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Inaugural Session
2.1. Keynote 1: AAV: From Almost a Virus to an Awesome Vector (Or Is It?)
- Arun Srivastava
2.2. Keynote 2: Tackling Viral Infections by Human Monoclonal Antibodies
- Davide Corti
2.3. Keynote 3: Generating a Portfolio of Oncolytic Rodent Parvoviruses
- Jürg P.F. Nüesch
3. Session 1: Evolution and Structure
3.1. Review Lecture: Evolution of Canine and Feline Parvoviruses, and the Control of Viral Host Range and Antibody Neutralization
- Colin R. Parrish, Ian Voorhees, Heather Callaway, Hyunwook Le and Susan Hafenstein
3.2. Comparative Analysis Reveals the Long-Term Co-Evolutionary History of Parvoviruses and Vertebrates
- Matthew A. Campbell, Shannon Loncar, Robert Kotin and Robert J. Gifford
3.3. Odegus 4 Is an Endogenous Parvoviral Element with Antiviral Function
- Angelica Bravo, Leandro Fernandez, Rodrigo Ibarra-Karmy, Robert J. Gifford and Gloria Arriagada
3.4. Capsid Structures of Aleutian Mink Disease Virus and Human Parvovirus 4: Adding New Faces to the Family Portrait
- Mario Mietzsch, Renuk Lakshmanan, Alberto Jimenez Ybargollin, Paul Chipman, Xiaofeng Fu, Jianming Qiu, Maria Söderlund-Venermo, Robert McKenna and Mavis Agbandje-McKenna
4. Session 2: Receptors
4.1. Receptor and Antibody Interactions with AAV by Cryo-EM/ET
- Guiqing Hu, Mark Silveria, Edward Large, Nancy Meyer, Grant Zane, Scott Stagg and Michael S. Chapman
4.2. Characterization of Glycan Binding by AAV44.9, a Member of the New AAV Clade
- G. Di Pasquale, S. Afione, M. Khalaj, C. Zheng, B. Grewe and J.A. Chiorini
4.3. Human Parvovirus B19 Infection: A Tale of Two Receptors
- Jan Bieri, Cornelia Bircher, Ruben Assaraf, Remo Leisi and Carlos Ros
4.4. Globoside and the Mucosal pH Mediate Parvovirus B19 Entry through the Airway Epithelium
- Corinne Suter, Minela Colakovic, Jan Bieri, Mitra Gultom, Ronald Dijkman and Carlos Ros
4.5. Viral Capsid, Antibody and Receptor Interactions: Understanding the Binding, Neutralization, Antibody Escape and Receptor Binding Sites of Canine Parvovirus
- Robert A. López-Astacio, Daniel J. Goetschius, Hyunwook Lee, Wendy S. Weichert, Oluwafemi Adu, Brynn K. Alford, Ian E.H. Voorhees, Sarah Saddoris, Laura B. Goodman, Edward C. Holmes, Susan L. Hafenstein and Colin R. Parrish*
5. Session 3: Replication
5.1. Cryo-EM Structure of the Rep68-AAVS1 Complex
- R. Jaiswal, V. Santosh and C.R. Escalante
5.2. Insights into the ITR Melting Mechanism: Cryo-EM Structure of the Rep68–ITR Complex
- R. Jaiswal, V. Santosh, A. Washington, B. Braud and C.R. Escalante
5.3. AAV2 Can Replicate Its DNA by a Rolling Hairpin or Rolling Circle Mechanism, Depending on the Helper Virus
- Anouk Lkharrazi, Kurt Tobler, Anita Meie, Bernd Vogt and Cornel Fraefel
5.4. Consequence and Mechanism of Chk1 Inactivation by MVM during Its Infection
- Igor Etingov and David Pintel
5.5. The Autonomous Parvovirus Minute Virus of Mice Localizes to the Cellular Sites of DNA Damage Using Its Non-Structural Protein NS1
- Lauren Bunke, MegAnn Haubold, Clairine Larsen, Rhiannon Abrahams, Sarah Rubin, Isabella Jones, Jessica Pita Aquino and Kinjal Majumder
5.6. Carnivore Bocaparvovirus 1 (Minute Virus of Canines) NP1 Modulates Viral Alternative RNA Processing
- Lisa Uhl, Yaming Dong, David J. Pintel and Olufemi Fasina
5.7. A Functional Minigenome of Parvovirus B19
- Alessandro Reggiani, Erika Fasano, Gloria Bua, Elisabetta Manaresi and Giorgio Gallinella
6. Session 4: Trafficking
6.1. Review Lecture: Nuclear Entry and Egress of Parvoviruses
- Maija Vihinen-Ranta
6.2. A Classical cNLS Is Responsible for the Importin α/β-Dependent Nuclear Transport of Human Parvovirus B19 Non-Structural Protein 1
- Gualtiero Alvisi, Elisabetta Manaresi, Emily M. Cross, Nasim Akbari, Gayle F. Petersen, Roberto Garuti, Jade Forwood and Giorgio Gallinella
6.3. Adeno-Associated Virus Type 2 (AAV2) Uncoating Is a Stepwise Process and Is Linked to the Structural Reorganization of the Nucleolus
- Sereina O. Sutter, Anouk Lkharrazi, Elisabeth M. Schraner, Anita F. Meier, Kevin Michaelson, Hildegard Büning and Cornel Fraefel
6.4. The Phase-Separation Properties of the AAV2 Assembly-Activating Protein
- Janine Vetter, Manuel Kley, Catherine Eichwald and Cornel Fraefel
7. Session 5: Virus–Host Interactions
7.1. Identification of Human Monoclonal Antibodies Potently Neutralizing Parvovirus B19
- Davide Corti
7.2. Enhanced Detection and Production of Parvovirus B19V Depends on the Cell Cycle Status of Erythroid Cells
- Zahra Kadri, Amandine Langelé, Bruno You, Céline Ducloux, Olivier Goupille, Emmanuel Payen and Stany Chrétien
7.3. Rodent Protoparvoviruses MVMp and H-1PV Are Master Regulators of the Host Antiviral Innate Immune Response
- Assia Angelova, Annabel Grewenig, Estelle Santiago, Jürg Nüesch, Jean Rommelaere and Laurent Daeffler
7.4. Parvovirus Infection Alters the Nucleolar Structure
- Salla Mattola, Simon Leclerc, Satu Hakanen, Vesa Aho, Colin R. Parrish and Maija Vihinen-Ranta
7.5. Parvovirus Non-Structural Protein 2 Associates with Chromatin-Regulating Proteins
- Salla Mattola, Kari Salokas, Vesa Aho, Elina Mäntylä, Sami Salminen, Satu Hakanen, Colin R. Parrish, Markku Varjosalo and Maija Vihinen-Ranta
8. Session 6: AAV and Viral Vectors
8.1. Detection of AAV2 in Living Cells
- Luisa F. Bustamante-Jaramillo, Josh Fingall and Michael Kann
8.2. Whole-Genome siRNA and microRNA High-Throughput Screenings to Identify the Molecular Determinants That Govern AAV Vector Transduction
- Lorena Zentilin, Edoardo Schneider, Ambra Cappelletto and Mauro Giacca
8.3. From AAV Virus to AAV Vectors: Characterization of a Collection of AAV Capsid Variants Isolated from the Human Liver
- T. La Bella, B. Bertin, J. Nozi, T. Tedesco, A. Mihaljevic, P. Vidal, S. Imbeaud, N.C. Nault, J. Zucman-Rossi and G. Ronzitti
8.4. Isolation of Novel AAV Serotypes from Pig Tissues for Retinal Gene Therapy
- Emanuela Pone, Vivien Temás, Antonella Ferrara, Ferenc Olasz, Anna Furiano, Ivana Trapani, Zadori Zoltán and Alberto Auricchio
8.5. Development of a Synthetic AAV Vector for the Gene Therapy of Hemophilia in Children
- Jakob Shoti, Keyun Qing and Arun Srivastava
9. Session 7: Clinical and Veterinarian Parvovirology
9.1. First Evidence of a New Porcine Parvovirus Species in Italy: A Survey of Reproductive Failure Outbreaks
- G. Faustini, C.M. Tucciarone, A. Donneschi, G. Franzo, B. Boniotti, G.L. Alborali and M. Drigo
9.2. Phylogenetic and Clinical Relationships among Canine and Feline Parvovirus Strains Collected from Parvovirosis Cases in Italy
- Claudia Maria Tucciarone, Giovanni Franzo, Matteo Legnardi, Andrea Zoia, Matteo Petini, Tommaso Furlanello, Marco Caldin, Mattia Cecchinato and Michele Drigo
9.3. Post-Vaccination Polyclonal Antibody Response Mapped by Cryo-EM
- Samantha R. Hartmann, Simon Frueh, Robert Lopez-Astacio, Wendy S. Weichart, Nadia Di Nunno, Sung Hung Cho, Carol M. Bato, Colin R. Parrish and Susan L. Hafenstein
9.4. Human Parvovirus Tissue Persistence: Cell Tropism, Activity and Impact
- Man Xu, Katarzyna Leskinen, Tommaso Gritti, Valerija Groma, Johanna Arola, Anna Lepistö, Taina Sipponen, Päivi Saavalainen and Maria Söderlund-Venermo
9.5. High Prevalence and Activity of Cutavirus in Parapsoriasis Patients
- Ushanandini Mohanraj, Alexander Salava, Liisa Väkevä, Annamari Ranki and Maria Söderlund-Venermo
10. Session 8: Gene Therapy
10.1. Dynorphin-Based “Release on Demand” Gene Therapy for Drug-Resistant Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
- Regine Heilbronn, Alexandra S. Agostinho, Mario Mietzsch, Luca Zangrandi, Iwona Kmiec, Anna Mutti, Larissa Kraus, Pawel Fidzinski, Ulf C. Schneider, Martin Holtkamp and Christoph Schwarzer
10.2. Structural and Kinetic Characterization of Anti-AAV9 Monoclonal Antibodies Derived from Patients’ Post-Zolgensma® Treatment
- Jane Hsi, Mario Mietzsch, Austin Nelson, Paul Chipman, Jenny Jackson, Peter Schofield, Daniel Christ, Joanne Reed, Neeta Khandekar, Grant Logan, Ian E. Alexander and Robert McKenna
10.3. Development of Optimized (Opt) AAVrh74 Vectors with Increased Transduction Efficiency in Primary Human Skeletal Muscle Cells In Vitro and in Mouse Muscles In Vivo Following Systemic Administration
- Keyun Qing, Jakob Shoti, Geoffrey D. Keeler, Barry J. Byrne and Arun Srivastava
10.4. Development of Genome-Modified Generation Y (GenY) AAVrh74 Vectors with Improved Transgene Expression in Primary Human Skeletal Muscle Cells In Vitro and in Mouse Muscles In Vivo Following Systemic Administration
- Jakob Shoti, Keyun Qing, Geoffrey D. Keeler, Barry J. Byrne and Arun Srivastava
11. Session 9: Oncolytic Viruses
11.1. Review Lecture: Characterization of the H-1PV Life Cycle as a Way to Improve Its Anticancer Efficacy
- Amit Kulkarni, Tiago Ferreira, Tiina Marttila, Gayatri Kawishwar, Anna Hartley and Antonio Marchini
11.2. Engineering Functional Domains of MVM Capsid with VEGF-Blocking Peptides to Enhance Parvovirus Oncolytic Capacity
- Tania Calvo-López, Esther Grueso, Cristina Sánchez-Martínez and José M. Almendral
11.3. MVM Selectively Infects and Disrupts Glioblastoma-Stem-Cell-Derived Tumors with Patient-Specific p53 Deregulations
- Jon Gil-Ranedo, Carlos Gallego-García and José M. Almendral
11.4. Identification of an Antiviral Drug as a Novel Potentiator of H-1PV-Mediated Oncolysis
- Anna Hartley, Valérie Palissot, Tiina Marttila, Toros Tasgin, Céline Jeanty, Gian Mario Dore, Laurent Brino, Anne Maglott-Roth, Richard Harbottle and Antonio Marchini
11.5. Oncolytic H-1 Parvovirus in Combination with the Pro-Apoptotic Drug ABT-737 Shows Improved Cytotoxicity and Immune Activation in Prostate Cancer Cells
- Gayatri Kavishwar, Alice De Roia, Dirk M. Nettelbeck, Richard Harbottle, Marcelo Ehrlich, Guy Ungerechts and Antonio Marchini
12. Poster Session
P.01 Variability analysis of Parvovirus B19 sequences obtained through Next-Generation Sequencing |
Federica Bichicchi, Niccolò Guglietta, Arthur Daniel Rocha Alves, Gloria Bua, Francesca Bonvicini, Elisabetta Manaresi, Giorgio Gallinella |
P.02 In vitro models for the study of B19V interaction with the human placental BeWo monolayer |
Francesca Bonvicini, Gloria Bua, Erika Fasano, Elisabetta Manaresi, Giorgio Gallinella |
P.03 Mesenchymal stem cells are susceptible but non-permissive to B19V replication |
Gloria Bua, Pasquale Marrazzo, Francesco Alviano, Laura Bonsi, Giorgio Gallinella |
P.04 The role of Host Cell Factor 1 in the life cycle of AAV |
Caroline Dierckx, Zander Claes, Mathieu Bollen, Els Henckaerts |
P.05 Analysis of Parvovirus B19 transcriptome in UT7/EpoS1 cells by mRNAseq techniques |
Erika Fasano, Gloria Bua, Stefano Amadesi, Alessandro Reggiani, Elisabetta Manaresi, Fabrizio Ferrè, Giorgio Gallinella |
P.06 Prevalence of Human Chaphamaparvoviruses |
Jingjing Li, and Maria Söderlund-Venermo |
P.07 Brain organoids as a platform to study subcellular trafficking of recombinant AAV vectors |
Marlies Leysen, Idris Salmon, Sereina O. Sutter, Cornel Fraefel, Adrian Ranga, Benjamien Moeyaert, Els Henckaerts |
P.08 Equine Parvovirus Hepatitis qPCR screening of stored equine heparin plasma and serum samples with and without increased liver enzyme activities |
Anna Sophie Ramsauer, Ina Mersich, Irina Preining, Jessika-Maximiliane Cavalleri |
P.09 FLIM-FRET studies of AAV capsid nuclear disintegration |
Visa Ruokolainen, Michael Kann, Maija Vihinen-Ranta |
P.10 Enhanced transduction efficiency of AAV vectors mediated by polyvinyl alcohol and human serum albumin is serotype- and cell type-specific |
Jakob Shoti, Claire K. Scozzari, Reema Kashif, Hua Yang, Mengqun Tan, Wei Wang, Keyun Qing, Arun Srivastava |
P.11 Development of allele-specific dual PCRs to identify members of the 27a cluster of PPV1 |
Vivien Tamás, Ferenc Olasz, István Mészáros, István Kiss, Zalán G. Homonnay, Preben Mortensen, Zoltán Zádori |
P.12 A record of Parvovirus B19 laboratory diagnosis in endemic/epidemic or COVID-19 pandemic |
Simona Venturoli; Alessia Bertoldi; Elisabetta Manaresi, Giorgio Gallinella. |
P.13 Enhanced muscle transduction by clade F vector AAVhu.32 translates across multiple animal models |
Samantha A. Yost, Randolph Qian, April R. Giles, Sungyeon Cho, Chunping Qiao, Olivier Danos, Ye Liu, Andrew C. Mercer |
13. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Contributor List
Conflicts of Interest
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© 2023 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Gallinella, G.; Marchini, A. The XVIII International Parvovirus Workshop Rimini, Italy, 14–17 June 2022. Viruses 2023, 15, 2129. https://doi.org/10.3390/v15102129
Gallinella G, Marchini A. The XVIII International Parvovirus Workshop Rimini, Italy, 14–17 June 2022. Viruses. 2023; 15(10):2129. https://doi.org/10.3390/v15102129
Chicago/Turabian StyleGallinella, Giorgio, and Antonio Marchini. 2023. "The XVIII International Parvovirus Workshop Rimini, Italy, 14–17 June 2022" Viruses 15, no. 10: 2129. https://doi.org/10.3390/v15102129
APA StyleGallinella, G., & Marchini, A. (2023). The XVIII International Parvovirus Workshop Rimini, Italy, 14–17 June 2022. Viruses, 15(10), 2129. https://doi.org/10.3390/v15102129