InVivoMAb anti-Influenza A virus NP
Product Description
Specifications
| Isotype | Mouse IgG2a |
|---|---|
| Recommended Isotype Control(s) | InVivoMAb mouse IgG2a isotype control, unknown specificity |
| Recommended Dilution Buffer | InVivoPure pH 7.0 Dilution Buffer |
| Conjugation | This product is unconjugated. Conjugation is available via our Antibody Conjugation Services. |
| Immunogen | Mediastinal lymphocytes from BALB/c mice infected with influenza A virus |
| Reported Applications |
Immunoprecipitation Immunohistochemistry (paraffin) in vivo induction of passive immunity to influenza A virus Western blot Flow cytometry |
| Formulation |
PBS, pH 7.0 Contains no stabilizers or preservatives |
| Endotoxin |
≤1EU/mg (≤0.001EU/μg) Determined by LAL assay |
| Purity |
≥95% Determined by SDS-PAGE |
| Sterility | 0.2 µm filtration |
| Production | Purified from cell culture supernatant in an animal-free facility |
| Purification | Protein G |
| RRID | AB_10949071 |
| Molecular Weight | 150 kDa |
| Storage | The antibody solution should be stored at the stock concentration at 4°C. Do not freeze. |
| Need a Custom Formulation? | See All Antibody Customization Options |
Application References
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Dawson, A. R., et al (2020). "Phosphorylation controls RNA binding and transcription by the influenza virus polymerase" PLoS Pathog 16(9): e1008841.
PubMed
The influenza virus polymerase transcribes and replicates the viral genome. The proper timing and balance of polymerase activity is important for successful replication. Genome replication is controlled in part by phosphorylation of NP that regulates assembly of the replication machinery. However, it remains unclear whether phosphorylation directly regulated polymerase activity. Here we identified polymerase phosphosites that control its function. Mutating phosphosites in the catalytic subunit PB1 altered polymerase activity and virus replication. Biochemical analyses revealed phosphorylation events that disrupted global polymerase function by blocking the NTP entry channel or preventing RNA binding. We also identified a regulatory site that split polymerase function by specifically suppressing transcription. These experiments show that host kinases phospho-regulate viral RNA synthesis directly by modulating polymerase activity and indirectly by controlling assembly of replication machinery. Further, they suggest polymerase phosphorylation may bias replication versus transcription at discrete times or locations during the infectious cycle.
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Freyn, A. W., et al (2020). "A Multi-Targeting, Nucleoside-Modified mRNA Influenza Virus Vaccine Provides Broad Protection in Mice" Mol Ther 28(7): 1569-1584.
PubMed
Influenza viruses are respiratory pathogens of public health concern worldwide with up to 650,000 deaths occurring each year. Seasonal influenza virus vaccines are employed to prevent disease, but with limited effectiveness. Development of a universal influenza virus vaccine with the potential to elicit long-lasting, broadly cross-reactive immune responses is necessary for reducing influenza virus prevalence. In this study, we have utilized lipid nanoparticle-encapsulated, nucleoside-modified mRNA vaccines to intradermally deliver a combination of conserved influenza virus antigens (hemagglutinin stalk, neuraminidase, matrix-2 ion channel, and nucleoprotein) and induce strong immune responses with substantial breadth and potency in a murine model. The immunity conferred by nucleoside-modified mRNA-lipid nanoparticle vaccines provided protection from challenge with pandemic H1N1 virus at 500 times the median lethal dose after administration of a single immunization, and the combination vaccine protected from morbidity at a dose of 50Â ng per antigen. The broad protective potential of a single dose of combination vaccine was confirmed by challenge with a panel of group 1 influenza A viruses. These findings support the advancement of nucleoside-modified mRNA-lipid nanoparticle vaccines expressing multiple conserved antigens as universal influenza virus vaccine candidates.
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Nigg, P. E. and J. Pavlovic (2015). "Oligomerization and GTP-binding requirements of MxA for viral target recognition and antiviral activity against influenza A virus" J Biol Chem. pii : jbc.M115.681494.
PubMed
The interferon (IFN)-induced human myxovirus resistance protein A (MxA) exhibits a broad antiviral activity against many viruses including influenza A virus (IAV). MxA belongs to the family of dynamin-like GTPases and assembles in vitro into dimers, tetramers and oligomeric ring-like structures. The molecular mechanism of action remains to be elucidated. Furthermore it is not clear whether MxA exerts its antiviral activity in a monomeric and/or multimeric form. Using a set of MxA mutants that form complexes with defined stoichiometry, we observed that in the presence of GTPgammaS, purified MxA disassembled into tetramers and dimers. Dimeric forms did not further disassemble into monomers. Infection experiments revealed that besides wild type MxA also dimeric and monomeric variants of MxA efficiently restricted IAV at a replication step after primary transcription. Moreover, only dimeric MxA was able to form stable complexes with the nucleoprotein (NP) of IAV. MxA interacted with NP independently of other viral components. Interestingly, the dimeric form of MxA was able to efficiently bind to NP from several MxA-sensitive strains but interacted much weaker with NP from the MxA-resistant PR8 strain derived from the H1N1 1918 lineage. Taken together, these data suggest that during infection a fraction of MxA disassembles into dimers that bind to NP synthesized following primary transcription in the cytoplasm, thereby preventing viral replication.
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Leung, Y. H., et al (2014). "Highly pathogenic avian influenza A H5N1 and pandemic H1N1 virus infections have different phenotypes in Toll-like receptor 3 knockout mice" J Gen Virol 95(Pt 9): 1870-1879.
PubMed
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) play an important role in innate immunity to virus infections. We investigated the role of TLR3 in the pathogenesis of H5N1 and pandemic H1N1 (pH1N1) influenza virus infections in mice. Wild-type mice and those defective in TLR3 were infected with influenza A/HK/486/97 (H5N1) or A/HK/415742/09 (pH1N1) virus. For comparison, mice defective in the gene for myeloid differential factor 88 (MyD88) were also infected with the viruses, because MyD88 signals through a TLR pathway different from TLR3. Survival and body weight loss were monitored for 14 days, and lung pathology, the lung immune-cell profile, viral load and cytokine responses were studied. H5N1-infected TLR3(-/-) mice had better survival than H5N1-infected WT mice, evident by significantly faster regain of body weight, lower viral titre in the lung and fewer pathological changes in the lung. However, this improved survival was not seen upon pH1N1 infection of TLR3(-/-) mice. In contrast, MyD88(-/-) mice had an increased viral titre and decreased leukocyte infiltration in the lungs after infection with H5N1 virus and poorer survival after pH1N1 infection. In conclusion, TLR3 worsens the pathogenesis of H5N1 infection but not of pH1N1 infection, highlighting the differences in the pathogenesis of these two viruses and the different roles of TLR3 in their pathogenesis.
Product Citations
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Live-cell single-vRNP imaging identifies viral gene expression signatures that shape influenza infection heterogeneity.
In Cell Syst on 18 February 2026 by Rabouw, H. H., Schokolowski, J., et al.
PubMed
Cell-to-cell heterogeneity in infection outcome is a general feature of most viruses, but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. Here, we developed a live-cell single-molecule imaging technology to visualize infection by unmodified influenza A viruses (IAVs) with unprecedented resolution. Using this approach, we generated a detailed kinetic map of IAV infection, which identified viral ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) replication, nuclear export, and virion budding as important sources of heterogeneity. Mechanistically, we show that infection heterogeneity is caused by differential viral gene expression signatures, resulting from widespread transcriptional defects and loss of viral genome segments. For example, loss of NS, but surprisingly not polymerase subunits, severely delays replication onset, and loss of M and NS, but not HA, underlies vRNP nuclear export defects. In summary, our work identifies the origin and consequences of infection heterogeneity and provides a broadly applicable technology that allows high-resolution phenotyping of unmodified IAVs and other negative-strand RNA viruses.
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Development and characterization of chicken lung organoids for in vitro modeling of avian influenza virus-host cell interaction.
In Sci Rep on 10 January 2026 by Nicholson, H. F., Zdyrski, C., et al.
PubMed
High pathogenicity avian influenza viruses pose a growing threat to poultry, livestock, wildlife, and humans as they undergo accelerated expansion of host and geographical ranges. Since 2020, these viruses have driven a panzootic characterized by extensive viral diversification and spillover into species previously considered to be resistant. There is currently a lack of physiologically relevant in vitro models that can be used to screen the rapidly changing viral landscape. To address this need, we describe the first chicken lung organoids derived from adult stem cells of specific pathogen free White Leghorns. We analyze their gene expression with bulk RNA sequencing, confirm their cellular heterogeneity via single-nuclei RNA sequencing, and provide basic morphological characterization using hematoxylin and eosin staining, immunohistochemistry, and transmission electron microscopy. The results indicate that the organoids contained several cell types, including non-ciliated columnar, cuboidal, squamous, and mucin-producing cells, representative of different regions of the avian respiratory system. Furthermore, expression of genes relevant to influenza A virus infection and replication appeared to be conserved across organoid and tissue samples. Infections revealed that chicken lung organoids support robust replication of both low and high pathogenicity avian influenza A viruses, with high pathogenicity strains showing more rapid amplification. Therefore, these organoids have the potential to effectively model viral infection, enabling the investigation of viral pathogenesis and evolutionary potential, virus-host interactions, and antiviral targets.
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Global remodeling of ADP-ribosylation by PARP1 suppresses influenza A virus infection.
In Nat Commun on 17 December 2025 by Zhang, Z., Uribe, I., et al.
PubMed
ADP-ribosylation is a highly dynamic and fully reversible post-translational modification performed by PARP enzymes that modulates protein function, abundance, localization, and turnover. Here we show that PARPs mount an antiviral response to influenza A virus infection causing a rapid and dramatic upregulation of global ADP-ribosylation that inhibits viral replication. Mass spectrometry analyzes define the global ADP-ribosylome during infection, creating an infection-specific profile with almost 4000 modification sites on ~1000 host proteins, as well as over 100 modification sites on viral proteins. Our data suggest that the global increase reflects a change in the form of ADP-ribosylation rather than modification of new targets. Functional assays demonstrate that modification of the viral replication machinery antagonizes its activity. We further show that the influenza A virus protein NS1 counteracts the anti-viral activity of PARPs and ADP-ribosylation, assigning a new activity to the primary viral antagonist of innate immunity. We identify PARP1 as the enzyme producing the majority of poly(ADP-ribose) present during infection. Influenza A virus replicates faster in cells lacking PARP1, linking PARP1 and ADP-ribosylation to the anti-viral phenotype. Together, these data establish ADP-ribosylation as an anti-viral innate immune-like response to viral infection antagonized by a previously unknown activity of NS1.
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Influenza virus antagonizes self sensing by RIG-I to enhance viral replication
In bioRxiv on 12 March 2025 by Ledwith, M. P., Nipper, T., et al.