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1.
H W Virgin  th  K L Tyler 《Journal of virology》1991,65(10):5157-5164
We studied the role of T cells in resistance to reovirus intestinal and central nervous system infection. Transfer of reovirus-immune adult spleen cells protected neonatal mice from (i) lethal infection with reovirus serotype 3 Dearing (T3D, footpad inoculation) and serotype 3 clone 9 (T3C9, oral inoculation) and (ii) hydrocephalus caused by serotype 1 Lang (T1L, intracranial [i.c.] inoculation). Cell-mediated protection was not serotype specific. While immune cells protected against T1L i.c., they failed to protect against 1/5,000 of the dose of T3D i.c. Two types of experiments showed that both CD4 and CD8 T cells are involved in reovirus resistance. First, immune cell-mediated protection against T3D was abrogated by in vivo treatment with anti-CD4 monoclonal antibody (MAb) and significantly inhibited by in vivo treatment with anti-CD8 MAb. Second, T3C9-infected neonatal mice treated with anti-CD4 and/or anti-CD8 developed a novel disease phenotype, an oily hair syndrome, associated with severe hepatobiliary pathology and increased viral titer in heart and liver. Immune cells and an MAb to the cell attachment protein sigma 1 (MAb G5) protected by different mechanisms. Immune cells were more effective than sigma 1 MAb G5 at controlling primary replication, while sigma 1 MAb G5 was more effective than immune cells at inhibiting neural spread of virus. We conclude that both CD4 and CD8 T cells are important for reovirus resistance, that cells and antibody act preferentially at different stages in pathogenesis in vivo, and that adoptively transferred immune cells can protect both the central nervous system and intestine.  相似文献   

2.
Serotype-specific differences in the capacity of reovirus strains to inhibit proliferation of murine L929 cells correlate with the capacity to induce apoptosis. The prototype serotype 3 reovirus strains Abney (T3A) and Dearing (T3D) inhibit cellular proliferation and induce apoptosis to a greater extent than the prototype serotype 1 reovirus strain Lang (T1L). We now show that reovirus-induced inhibition of cellular proliferation results from a G(2)/M cell cycle arrest. Using T1L x T3D reassortant viruses, we found that strain-specific differences in the capacity to induce G(2)/M arrest, like the differences in the capacity to induce apoptosis, are determined by the viral S1 gene. The S1 gene is bicistronic, encoding the viral attachment protein sigma1 and the nonstructural protein sigma1s. A sigma1s-deficient reovirus strain, T3C84-MA, fails to induce G(2)/M arrest, yet retains the capacity to induce apoptosis, indicating that sigma1s is required for reovirus-induced G(2)/M arrest. Expression of sigma1s in C127 cells increases the percentage of cells in the G(2)/M phase of the cell cycle, supporting a role for this protein in reovirus-induced G(2)/M arrest. Inhibition of reovirus-induced apoptosis failed to prevent virus-induced G(2)/M arrest, indicating that G(2)/M arrest is not the result of apoptosis related DNA damage and suggests that these two processes occur through distinct pathways.  相似文献   

3.
Penetration of the nervous systems of suckling mice by prototype strains of the three mammalian reovirus serotypes was studied after footpad inoculation of a dose (10(7) PFU) representing 3.5 x 10(3) 50% lethal doses (LD50) for reovirus type 3 Dearing and less than 1 LD50 for reoviruses type 1 Lang and type 2 Jones. Type 3 Dearing entered both motor and sensory neurons; infected neurons were clearly detectable by immunohistochemical staining 19 h after inoculation. By day 2, a second cycle of infection had occurred, and by day 4, several hundred motor and sensory neurons and interneurons were infected. By this time, infection also involved large areas of the brain stem and brain. There was evidence of both retrograde and anterograde movement of viral antigen within axons and dendrites. Unexpectedly, reovirus type 1 Lang followed neuronal pathways as well as being disseminated in the bloodstream. Reovirus type 2 Jones also entered neurons. While the number of motor neurons and interneurons infected with type 1 Lang or type 2 Jones remained limited within the first 4 days after inoculation, infection of sensory neurons increased with time and reached a level by day 4 comparable to that observed after infection with type 3 Dearing. Viral antigen was also found in the brain stem and brain, but this infection was limited. These three strains multiplied in nonneuronal tissues. Connective tissue in the footpad was massively infected by all three strains 19 h after inoculation. By this time, foci of infection were also present in muscle and skin. Viral antigen was repeatedly observed in the endothelium of blood vessels and in the meninges after infection with type 1 Lang. The titer of type 1 Lang increased in the blood with time, which was not observed after infection with strains of the other two serotypes. In this study, we found that prototype strains of the three reovirus serotypes exhibited different degrees of neurotropism, all being capable of entering neurons. Transmission of the infection occurred through synapses rather than from cell body to cell body. Thus reovirus, like herpesvirus and rabies virus, is a good marker for the identification of neuronal pathways, although its capacity to grow in neurons, unlike that of herpesvirus and rabies virus, is restricted to newborn animals.  相似文献   

4.
Reovirus serotype 1 Lang can be recovered in high titer from the intestines of neonatal mice up to day 8 after peroral inoculation. By contrast, reovirus serotype 3 Dearing cannot be recovered from intestinal tissue past day 4 after peroral inoculation. This difference between the two reoviruses was mapped by using reassortants generated from nonmutagenized laboratory stocks. When the L2 and S1 genes of reovirus serotype 3 Dearing were present in reassortants, the reassortants behaved like serotype 3 Dearing in exhibiting a decreased capacity to be recovered from intestinal tissue. Likewise, viruses which contained the L2 and S2 genes from serotype 1 Lang exhibited an enhanced capacity to grow and survive, which is characteristic of serotype 1 Lang. Thus, the capacity of reovirus to survive in intestinal tissue was determined by the L2 and S1 genes.  相似文献   

5.
Serotype 3 reoviruses inhibit cellular proliferation by inducing a G(2)/M phase cell cycle arrest. Reovirus-induced G(2)/M phase arrest requires the viral S1 gene-encoded sigma1s nonstructural protein. The G(2)-to-M transition represents a cell cycle checkpoint that is regulated by the kinase p34(cdc2). We now report that infection with serotype 3 reovirus strain Abney, but not serotype 1 reovirus strain Lang, is associated with inhibition and hyperphosphorylation of p34(cdc2). The sigma1s protein is necessary and sufficient for inhibitory phosphorylation of p34(cdc2), since a viral mutant lacking sigma1s fails to hyperphosphorylate p34(cdc2) and inducible expression of sigma1s is sufficient for p34(cdc2) hyperphosphorylation. These studies establish a mechanism by which reovirus can perturb cell cycle regulation.  相似文献   

6.
Biliary atresia is a devastating disorder of the newborn in which afflicted infants develop inflammation and fibrosis of the extrahepatic biliary tract, resulting in cirrhosis and end-stage liver disease. Infection with a virus is thought to be a contributing factor in the etiology of biliary atresia. In the murine model of biliary atresia, perinatal exposure to rhesus rotavirus (RRV) results in biliary epithelial cell infection causing bile duct obstruction. The purpose of this study was to determine if tropism for the biliary epithelial cell was unique to RRV. Newborn mice underwent intraperitoneal injection with five strains of rotavirus: RRV (simian), SA11-FM (simian/bovine), SA11-SM (simian), EDIM (murine), and Wa (human). RRV and SA11-FM caused clinical manifestations of bile duct obstruction and high mortality. SA11-SM caused clinical signs of hepatobiliary injury but the mortality was markedly reduced. EDIM and Wa caused no sign of hepatobiliary disease. The systemic and temporal distribution of viral protein and live virus varied according to the injected strain. Immunohistochemistry revealed that RRV and SA11-FM targeted the biliary epithelial cells. In contrast, SA11-SM was found in the liver but in not in the biliary epithelium. These results indicate that strain-specific characteristics dictate tropism for cells of hepatobiliary origin which in turn impact the ability to induce the murine model of biliary atresia.  相似文献   

7.
Mammalian reoviruses exhibit differences in the capacity to grow in intestinal tissue: reovirus type 1 Lang (T1L), but not type 3 Dearing (T3D), can be recovered in high titer from intestinal tissue of newborn mice after oral inoculation. We investigated whether in vitro protease treatment of virions of T1L and T3D, using conditions to generate infectious subvirion particles (ISVPs) as occurs in the intestinal lumen of mice (D. K. Bodkin, M. L. Nibert, and B. N. Fields, J. Virol. 63:4676-4681, 1989), affects viral infectivity. Chymotrypsin treatment of T1L was associated with a 2-fold increase in viral infectivity, whereas identical treatment of T3D resulted in a 10-fold decrease in infectivity. Using sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, we found that loss of T3D infectivity was correlated with cleavage of its sigma 1 protein. We used reassortant viruses to identify viral determinants of infectivity loss and sigma 1 cleavage and found that both phenotypes segregate with the sigma 1-encoding S1 gene. Comparable results were obtained when trypsin treatment of virions of T1L and T3D was used. In experiments to determine the fate of sigma 1 fragments following cleavage, the capacity of anti-sigma 1 monoclonal antibody G5 to neutralize infectivity of T3D ISVPs was significantly decreased in comparison with its capacity to neutralize infectivity of virions, suggesting that a sigma 1 domain bound by G5 is lost from viral particles after proteolytic digestion. In contrast to the decrease in infectivity, chymotrypsin treatment of T3D virions leading to generation of ISVPs resulted in a 10-fold increase in their capacity to produce hemagglutination, indicating that a domain of sigma 1 important for binding to sialic acid remains associated with viral particles after sigma 1 cleavage. Neuraminidase treatment of L cells substantially decreased the yield of T3D ISVPs in comparison with the yield of virions, indicating that a sigma 1 domain important for binding sialic acid also can mediate attachment of T3D ISVPs to L cells and lead to productive infection. These results suggest that cleavage of T3D sigma 1 protein following oral inoculation of newborn mice is at least partly responsible for the decreased growth of T3D in the intestine and provide additional evidence that T3D sigma 1 contains more than a single receptor-binding domain.  相似文献   

8.
9.
M L Barkon  B L Haller    H W Virgin  th 《Journal of virology》1996,70(2):1109-1116
Reoviruses are encapsidated double-stranded RNA viruses that cause systemic disease in mice after peroral (p.o.) inoculation and primary replication in the intestine. In this study, we define components of the immune system involved in the clearing of reovirus from the proximal small intestine. The intestines of immunocompetent adult CB17, 129, and C57BL/6 mice were cleared of reovirus serotype 3 clone 9 (T3C9) within 7 days of p.o. inoculation. Antigen-specific lymphocytes were important for the clearance of intestinal infection, since severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice failed to clear T3C9 infection. To define specific immune components required for intestinal clearance, reovirus infection of mice with null mutations in the immunoglobulin M (IgM) transmembrane exon (MuMT; B cell and antibody deficient) or beta 2 microglobulin gene (beta 2-/-; CD8 deficient) was evaluated. beta 2-/- mice cleared reovirus infection with normal kinetics, while MuMT mice showed delayed clearance of T3C9 7 to 11 days after p.o. inoculation. Adoptive transfer of splenic lymphocytes from reovirus-immune CB17 mice inhibited growth of T3C9 in CB17 SCID mouse intestine 11 days after p.o. inoculation. The efficiency of viral clearance by adoptively transferred cells was significantly diminished by depletion of B cells prior to adoptive transfer. Results in SCID and MuMT mice demonstrate an important role for B cells or IgG in clearance of reovirus from the intestines. Polyclonal reovirus-immune rabbit serum, protein A-purified immune IgG, and murine monoclonal IgG2a antibody specific for reovirus outer capsid protein sigma 3 administered intraperitoneally all normalized clearance of reovirus from intestinal tissue in MuMT mice. This result demonstrates an IgA-independent role for IgG in the clearance of intestinal virus infection. Polyclonal reovirus-immune serum also significantly decreased reovirus titers in the intestines of SCID mice, demonstrating a T-cell-independent role for antibody in the clearance of intestinal reovirus infection. B cells and circulating IgG play an important role in the clearance of reovirus from intestines, suggesting that IgG may play a more prominent functional role at mucosal sites of primary viral replication than was previously supposed.  相似文献   

10.
Hemagglutination (HA) by the mammalian reoviruses is mediated by interactions between the viral sigma 1 protein and sialoglycoproteins on the erythrocyte surface. Three serotype 3 (T3) reovirus strains were identified that do not agglutinate either bovine or type O human erythrocytes (HA negative): T3 clone 43 (T3C43), T3 clone 44 (T3C44), and T3 clone 84 (T3C84). These three strains also showed a diminished capacity to bind the major erythrocyte sialoglycoprotein, glycophorin, in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. To determine the molecular basis for these findings, we examined the deduced sigma 1 amino acid sequences of the three HA-negative T3 strains and four HA-positive T3 strains. The limited number of sequence differences in the sigma 1 proteins of these seven strains allowed us to identify single unique amino acid residues in each of the HA-negative strains (aspartate 198 in T3C43, leucine 204 in T3C44, and tryptophan 202 in T3C84) that cluster within a discrete region of the sigma 1 tail. The identification of sigma 1 residues important for HA and glycophorin binding suggests that tail-forming sequences are exposed on the virion surface, where they interact with carbohydrate residues on the surface of cells.  相似文献   

11.
B Sherry  M A Blum 《Journal of virology》1994,68(12):8461-8465
Previously, we showed that the M1 gene (encoding a viral core protein, mu 2, whose function is unknown) was associated with the efficiently myocarditic phenotype of a reovirus variant, 8B. Here, we have extended our genetic analysis of 8B and conducted genetic analyses of two other reovirus strains (T1L [serotype 1 strain Lang] and Abney). Our results demonstrate that multiple viral core proteins are determinants of reovirus-induced myocarditis. In contrast to our previous association of mu 2 with induction of myocarditis, this provides strong evidence that a core function achieved through the interaction of multiple core proteins is responsible for induction of the disease.  相似文献   

12.
Reoviruses are important models for studies of viral pathogenesis; however, the mechanisms by which these viruses produce cytopathic effects in infected cells have not been defined. In this report, we show that murine L929 (L) cells infected with prototype reovirus strains type 1 Lang (TIL) and type 3 Dearing (T3D) undergo apoptosis and that T3D induces apoptosis to a substantially greater extent than T1L. Using T1L x T3D reassortant viruses, we found that differences in the capacity of T1L and T3D to induce apoptosis are determined by the viral S1 gene segment, which encodes the viral attachment protein sigma 1 and the non-virion-associated protein sigma 1s. Apoptosis was induced by UV-inactivated, replication-incompetent reovirus virions, which do not contain sigma 1s and do not mediate its synthesis in infected cells. Additionally, T3D-induced apoptosis was inhibited by anti-reovirus monoclonal antibodies that inhibit T3D cell attachment and disassembly. These results indicate that sigma 1, rather than sigma 1s, is required for induction of apoptosis by the reovirus and suggest that interaction of virions with cell surface receptors is an essential step in this mechanism of cell killing.  相似文献   

13.
Reovirus infections are initiated by the binding of viral attachment protein sigma1 to receptors on the surface of host cells. The sigma1 protein is an elongated fiber comprised of an N-terminal tail that inserts into the virion and a C-terminal head that extends from the virion surface. The prototype reovirus strains type 1 Lang/53 (T1L/53) and type 3 Dearing/55 (T3D/55) use junctional adhesion molecule A (JAM-A) as a receptor. The C-terminal half of the T3D/55 sigma1 protein interacts directly with JAM-A, but the determinants of receptor-binding specificity have not been identified. In this study, we investigated whether JAM-A also mediates the attachment of the prototype reovirus strain type 2 Jones/55 (T2J/55) and a panel of field-isolate strains representing each of the three serotypes. Antibodies specific for JAM-A were capable of inhibiting infections of HeLa cells by T1L/53, T2J/55, and T3D/55, demonstrating that strains of all three serotypes use JAM-A as a receptor. To corroborate these findings, we introduced JAM-A or the structurally related JAM family members JAM-B and JAM-C into Chinese hamster ovary cells, which are poorly permissive for reovirus infection. Both prototype and field-isolate reovirus strains were capable of infecting cells transfected with JAM-A but not those transfected with JAM-B or JAM-C. A sequence analysis of the sigma1-encoding S1 gene segment of the strains chosen for study revealed little conservation in the deduced sigma1 amino acid sequences among the three serotypes. This contrasts markedly with the observed sequence variability within each serotype, which is confined to a small number of amino acids. Mapping of these residues onto the crystal structure of sigma1 identified regions of conservation and variability, suggesting a likely mode of JAM-A binding via a conserved surface at the base of the sigma1 head domain.  相似文献   

14.
Nonfusogenic mammalian orthoreovirus (reovirus) is an enteric pathogen of mice and a useful model for studies of how an enteric virus crosses the mucosal barrier of its host and is subject to control by the mucosal immune system. We recently generated and characterized a new murine immunoglobulin A (IgA)-class monoclonal antibody (MAb), 1E1, that binds to the adhesin fiber, sigma1, of reovirus type 1 Lang (T1L) and thereby neutralizes the infectivity of that strain in cell culture. 1E1 is produced in hybridoma cultures as a mixture of monomers, dimers, and higher polymers and is protective against peroral challenges with T1L either when the MAb is passively administered or when it is secreted into the intestines of mice bearing subcutaneous hybridoma tumors. In the present study, selection and analysis of mutants resistant to neutralization by 1E1 identified the region of T1L sigma1 to which the MAb binds. The region bound by a previously characterized type 1 sigma1-specific neutralizing IgG MAb, 5C6, was identified in the same way. Each of the 15 mutants isolated and analyzed was found to be much less sensitive to neutralization by either 1E1 or 5C6, suggesting the two MAbs bind to largely overlapping regions of sigma1. The tested mutants retained the capacity to recognize specific glycoconjugate receptors on rabbit M cells and cultured epithelial cells, even though viral binding to epithelial cells was inhibited by both MAbs. S1 sequence determinations for 12 of the mutants identified sigma1 mutations at four positions between residues 415 and 447, which contribute to forming the receptor-binding head domain. When aligned with the sigma1 sequence of reovirus type 3 Dearing (T3D) and mapped onto the previously reported crystal structure of the T3D sigma1 trimer, the four positions cluster on the side of the sigma1 head, across the interface between two subunits. Three such interface-spanning epitopes are thus present per sigma1 trimer and require the intact quaternary structure of the head domain for MAb binding. Identification of these intersubunit epitopes on sigma1 opens the way for further studies of the mechanisms of antibody-based neutralization and protection with type 1 reoviruses.  相似文献   

15.
The reovirus attachment protein, sigma1, is responsible for strain-specific patterns of viral tropism in the murine central nervous system and receptor binding on cultured cells. The sigma1 protein consists of a fibrous tail domain proximal to the virion surface and a virion-distal globular head domain. To better understand mechanisms of reovirus attachment to cells, we conducted studies to identify the region of sigma1 that binds cell surface carbohydrate. Chimeric and truncated sigma1 proteins derived from prototype reovirus strains type 1 Lang (T1L) and type 3 Dearing (T3D) were expressed in insect cells by using a baculovirus vector. Assessment of expressed protein susceptibility to proteolytic cleavage, binding to anti-sigma1 antibodies, and oligomerization indicates that the chimeric and truncated sigma1 proteins are properly folded. To assess carbohydrate binding, recombinant sigma1 proteins were tested for the capacity to agglutinate mammalian erythrocytes and to bind sialic acid presented on glycophorin, the cell surface molecule bound by type 3 reovirus on human erythrocytes. Using a panel of two wild-type and ten chimeric and truncated sigma1 proteins, the sialic acid-binding domain of type 3 sigma1 was mapped to a region of sequence proposed to form the more amino terminal of two predicted beta-sheet structures in the tail. This unit corresponds to morphologic region T(iii) observed in computer-processed electron micrographs of sigma1 protein purified from virions. In contrast, the homologous region of T1L sigma1 sequence was not implicated in carbohydrate binding; rather, sequences in the distal portion of the tail known as the neck were required. Results of these studies demonstrate that a functional receptor-binding domain, which uses sialic acid as its ligand, is contained within morphologic region T(iii) of the type 3 sigma1 tail. Furthermore, our findings indicate that T1L and T3D sigma1 proteins contain different arrangements of receptor-binding domains.  相似文献   

16.
Recent studies demonstrated that viremia and extraintestinal rotavirus infection are common in acutely infected humans and animals, while systemic diseases appear to be rare. Intraperitoneal infection of newborn mice with rhesus rotavirus (RRV) results in biliary atresia (BA), and this condition is influenced by the host interferon response. We studied orally inoculated 5-day-old suckling mice that were deficient in interferon (IFN) signaling to evaluate the role of interferon on the outcome of local and systemic infection after enteric inoculation. We found that systemic replication of RRV, but not murine rotavirus strain EC, was greatly enhanced in IFN-α/β and IFN-γ receptor double-knockout (KO) or STAT1 KO mice but not in mice deficient in B- or T-cell immunity. The enhanced replication of RRV was associated with a lethal hepatitis, pancreatitis, and BA, while no systemic disease was observed in strain EC-infected interferon-deficient mice. In IFN-α/β receptor KO mice the extraintestinal infection and systemic disease were only moderately increased, while RRV infection was not augmented and systemic disease was not present in IFN-γ receptor KO mice. The increase of systemic infection in IFN-deficient mice was also observed during simian strain SA11 infection but not following bovine NCDV, porcine OSU, or murine strain EW infection. Our data indicate that the requirements for the interferon system to inhibit intestinal and extraintestinal viral replication in suckling mice vary among different heterologous and homologous rotavirus strains, and this variation is associated with lethal systemic disease.  相似文献   

17.
The mammalian reoviruses are capable of inhibiting cellular DNA synthesis and inducing apoptosis. Reovirus strains type 3 Abney (T3A) and type 3 Dearing (T3D) inhibit cellular DNA synthesis and induce apoptosis to a substantially greater extent than strain type 1 Lang (T1L). We used T1L x T3A and T1L x T3D reassortant viruses to identify viral genes associated with differences in the capacities of reovirus strains to elicit these cellular responses to viral infection. We found that the S1 and M2 genome segments determine differences in the capacities of both T1L x T3A and T1L x T3D reassortant viruses to inhibit cellular DNA synthesis and to induce apoptosis. These genes encode viral outer-capsid proteins that play important roles in viral attachment and disassembly. To extend these findings, we used field isolate strains of reovirus to determine whether the strain-specific differences in inhibition of cellular DNA synthesis and induction of apoptosis are also associated with viral serotype, a property determined by the S1 gene. In these experiments, type 3 field isolate strains were found to inhibit cellular DNA synthesis and to induce apoptosis to a greater extent than type 1 field isolate strains. Statistical analysis of these data indicate a significant correlation between the capacity of T1L x T3A and T1L x T3D reassortant viruses and field isolate strains to inhibit cellular DNA synthesis and to induce apoptosis. These findings suggest that reovirus-induced inhibition of cellular DNA synthesis and induction of apoptosis are linked and that both phenomena are induced by early steps in the viral replication cycle.  相似文献   

18.
Many viruses invade mucosal surfaces to establish infection in the host. Some viruses are restricted to mucosal surfaces, whereas others disseminate to sites of secondary replication. Studies of strain-specific differences in reovirus mucosal infection and systemic dissemination have enhanced an understanding of viral determinants and molecular mechanisms that regulate viral pathogenesis. After peroral inoculation, reovirus strain type 1 Lang replicates to high titers in the intestine and spreads systemically, whereas strain type 3 Dearing (T3D) does not. These differences segregate with the viral S1 gene segment, which encodes attachment protein σ1 and nonstructural protein σ1s. In this study, we define genetic determinants that regulate reovirus-induced pathology following intranasal inoculation and respiratory infection. We report that two laboratory isolates of T3D, T3DC and T3DF, differ in the capacity to replicate in the respiratory tract and spread systemically; the T3DC isolate replicates to higher titers in the lungs and disseminates, while T3DF does not. Two nucleotide polymorphisms in the S1 gene influence these differences, and both S1 gene products are involved. T3DC amino acid polymorphisms in the tail and head domains of σ1 protein influence the sensitivity of virions to protease-mediated loss of infectivity. The T3DC polymorphism at nucleotide 77, which leads to coding changes in both S1 gene products, promotes systemic dissemination from the respiratory tract. A σ1s-null virus produces lower titers in the lung after intranasal inoculation and disseminates less efficiently to sites of secondary replication. These findings provide new insights into mechanisms underlying reovirus replication in the respiratory tract and systemic spread from the lung.  相似文献   

19.
Serotype 1 Lang strain s4 mRNA, which encodes the major capsid surface polypeptide sigma 3 of reovirions, was cloned as a cDNA:mRNA heteroduplex in Escherichia coli using phage M13. A complete consensus nucleotide sequence for s4 mRNA has been determined from cDNA clones. The Lang strain s4 mRNA is 1196 nucleotides in length and possesses an open reading frame with a coding capacity of 365 amino acids, sufficient to account for a sigma 3 polypeptide of 41,212 daltons. Comparison of the serotype 1 (Lang) s4 sequence with the serotype 3 (Dearing) s4 sequence reveals 94% homology at the nucleotide level; the predicted sigma 3 polypeptides of the Lang and Dearing strains display 96% homology at the amino acid level. Two third base C codons (leu:CUC and ser:AGC) are used about one-tenth as frequently in the reovirus s4 mRNAs as compared to mammalian cellular mRNAs.  相似文献   

20.
The mechanisms by which viruses kill susceptible cells in target organs and ultimately produce disease in the infected host remain poorly understood. Dependent upon the site of inoculation and strain of virus, experimental infection of neonatal mice with reoviruses can induce fatal encephalitis or myocarditis. Reovirus-induced apoptosis is a major mechanism of tissue injury, leading to disease development in both the brain and heart. In cultured cells, differences in the capacity of reovirus strains to induce apoptosis are determined by the S1 gene segment, which also plays a major role as a determinant of viral pathogenesis in both the heart and the central nervous system (CNS) in vivo. The S1 gene is bicistronic, encoding both the viral attachment protein sigma-1 and the nonstructural protein sigma-1-small (sigma1s). Although sigma1s is dispensable for viral replication in vitro, we wished to investigate the expression of sigma1s in the infected heart and brain and its potential role in reovirus pathogenesis in vivo. Two-day-old mice were inoculated intramuscularly or intracerebrally with either sigma1s(-) or sigma1s(+) reovirus strains. While viral replication in target organs did not differ between sigma1s(-) and sigma1s(+) viral strains, virus-induced caspase-3 activation and resultant histological tissue injury in both the heart and brain were significantly reduced in sigma1s(-) reovirus-infected animals. These results demonstrate that sigma1s is a determinant of the magnitude and extent of reovirus-induced apoptosis in both the heart and CNS and thereby contributes to reovirus pathogenesis and virulence.  相似文献   

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