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1.
A protease activation mutant of Sendai virus, F1-R, causes a systemic infection in mice, whereas wild-type virus is exclusively pneumotropic (M. Tashiro, E. Pritzer, M. A. Khoshnan, M. Yamakawa, K. Kuroda, H.-D. Klenk, R. Rott, and J. T. Seto, Virology 165:577-583, 1988). Budding of F1-R has been observed bidirectionally at the apical and basolateral surfaces of the bronchial epithelium of mice and of MDCK cells, whereas wild-type virus buds apically (M. Tashiro, M. Yamakawa, K. Tobita, H.-D. Klenk, R. Rott, and J. T. Seto, J. Virol. 64:3627-3634, 1990). In this study, wild-type virus was shown to be produced primarily from the apical site of polarized MDCK cells grown on permeable membrane filters. Surface immunofluorescence and immunoprecipitation analyses revealed that transmembrane glycoproteins HN and F were expressed predominantly at the apical domain of the plasma membrane. On the other hand, infectious progeny of F1-R was released from the apical and basolateral surfaces, and HN and F were expressed at both regions of the cells. Since F1-R has amino acid substitutions in F and M proteins but none in HN, the altered budding of the virus and transport of the envelope glycoproteins might be attributed to interactions by F and M proteins. These findings suggest that in addition to proteolytic activation of the F glycoprotein, the differential site of budding, at the primary target of infection, is a determinant for organ tropism of Sendai virus in mice.  相似文献   

2.
Wild-type Sendai virus buds at the apical plasma membrane domain of polarized epithelial MDCK cells, whereas a pantropic mutant, F1-R, buds at both the apical and basolateral domains. In F1-R-infected cells, polarized protein transport and the microtubule network are impaired. It has been suggested that the mutated F and/or M proteins in F1-R are responsible for these changes (M. Tashiro, J. T. Seto, H.-D. Klenk, and R. Rott, J. Virol. 67:5902-5910, 1993). To clarify which gene or mutation(s) was responsible for the microtubule disruption which leads to altered budding of F1-R, MDCK cell lines containing the M gene of either the wild type or F1-R were established. When wild-type M protein was expressed at a level corresponding to that synthesized in virus-infected cells, cellular polarity and the integrity of the microtubules were affected to some extent. On the other hand, expression of the mutated F1-R M protein resulted in the formation of giant cells about 40 times larger than normal MDCK cells. Under these conditions, the effects on the microtubule network were enhanced. The microtubules were disrupted and polarized protein transport was impaired as indicated by the nonpolarized secretion of gp80, a host cell glycoprotein normally secreted from the apical domain, and bipolar budding of wild-type and F1-R Sendai viruses. The mutated F glycoprotein of F1-R was transported bipolarly in cells expressing the F1-R M protein, whereas it was transported predominantly to the apical domain when expressed alone or in cells coexpressing the wild-type M protein. These findings indicate that the M protein of F1-R is involved in the disruption of the microtubular network, leading to impairment of cellular polarity, bipolar transport of the F glycoprotein, and bipolar budding of the virus.  相似文献   

3.
M Tashiro  J T Seto  H D Klenk    R Rott 《Journal of virology》1993,67(10):5902-5910
Envelope glycoproteins F and HN of wild-type Sendai virus are transported to the apical plasma membrane domain of polarized epithelial MDCK cells, where budding of progeny virus occurs. On the other hand, a pantropic mutant, F1-R, buds bipolarly at both the apical and basolateral domains, and the viral glycoproteins have also been shown to be transported to both of these domains (M. Tashiro, M. Yamakawa, K. Tobita, H.-D. Klenk, R. Rott, and J.T. Seto, J. Virol. 64:4672-4677, 1990). MDCK cells were infected with wild-type virus and treated with the microtubule-depolymerizing drugs colchicine and nocodazole. Budding of the virus and surface expression of the glycoproteins were found to occur in a nonpolarized fashion similar to that found in cells infected with F1-R. In uninfected cells, the drugs were shown to interfere with apical transport of a secretory cellular glycoprotein, gp80, and basolateral uptake of [35S]methionine as well as to disrupt microtubule structure, indicating that cellular polarity of MDCK cells depends on the presence of intact microtubules. Infection by the F1-R mutant partially affected the transport of gp80, uptake of [35S]methionine, and the microtubule network, whereas wild-type virus had a marginal effect. These results suggest that apical transport of the glycoproteins of wild-type Sendai virus in MDCK cells depends on intact microtubules and that bipolar budding by F1-R is possibly due, at least in part, to the disruption of microtubules. Nucleotide sequence analyses of the viral genes suggest that the mutated M protein of F1-R might be involved in the alteration of microtubules.  相似文献   

4.
Nipah virus (NiV), a highly pathogenic paramyxovirus, causes a systemic infection in vivo and is able to replicate in cultured cells of many species and organs. Such pantropic paramyxoviruses generally encode fusion (F) proteins with multibasic cleavage sites activated by furin or other ubiquitous intracellular host cell proteases. In contrast, NiV has an F protein with a single arginine (R109) at the cleavage site, as is the case with paramyxoviruses that are activated by trypsin-like proteases only present in specific cells or tissues and therefore only cause localized infections. Unlike these viruses, cleavage of the NiV F protein is ubiquitous and does not require the addition of exogenous proteases in cell culture. To determine the importance of the amino acid sequence at the NiV F protein cleavage site for ubiquitous activation, we generated NiV F proteins with mutations around R109. Surprisingly, neither the exchange of amino acids upstream of R109 nor replacement of the basic residue itself interfered with F cleavage. Thus, R109 is not essential for F cleavage and activation. Our data demonstrate that NiV F-protein activation depends on a novel type of proteolytic cleavage that has not yet been described for any other paramyxovirus F protein. NiV F activation is mediated by a ubiquitous protease that requires neither a monobasic nor a multibasic cleavage site and therefore differs from the furin- or trypsin-like proteases known to activate other ortho- and paramyxovirus fusion proteins.  相似文献   

5.
Y Mochizuki  M Tashiro    M Homma 《Journal of virology》1988,62(8):3040-3042
The pneumopathogenicity of a trypsin-sensitive revertant of Sendai virus, TSrev-58, which was derived from a trypsin-resistant mutant, TR-5, was examined in mice. In comparison with TR-5, the revertant had a single amino acid substitution at residue 116 (Ile----Arg) on F protein, which was the cleavage site, and had the same trypsin sensitivity as the wild-type virus. However, TSrev-58 still had a single amino acid difference from the wild-type virus at residue 109 (Asn----Asp) (M. Itoh, H. Shibuta, and M. Homma, J. Gen. Virol. 68:2939-2943, 1987). Nevertheless, the present study revealed that TSrev-58 had the same pneumopathogenicity in mice as the wild-type virus. This result indicates that the activating protease of Sendai virus present in the lungs of mice is quite similar to trypsin and also that the in vitro trypsin sensitivity of Sendai virus can be a good marker of pneumopathogenicity in mice.  相似文献   

6.
Results of serological tests carried out over a period of 6 years to detect the presence of antibodies against 14 indigenous viruses in mice and rats used in 32 Canadian institutions are reported. Close to 20,000 individual sera were tested by the complement fixation or the hemagglutination inhibition technics. In order of mouse colony prevalence the six most common viruses present were pneumonia virus of mice, mouse hepatitis virus, rat virus, minute virus of mice, Sendai, and Theiler's mouse encephalomyelitis viruses. The most common viruses present in rat colonies were minute virus of mice, K virus, coronaviruses (rat coronavirus or sialodacryoadenitis virus), rat virus, H-1, pneumonia virus of mice, Theiler's mouse encephalomyelitis viruses, Sendai, and reovirus 3.  相似文献   

7.
Enveloped viruses are released from infected cells after coalescence of viral components at cellular membranes and budding of membranes to release particles. For some negative-strand RNA viruses (e.g., vesicular stomatitis virus and Ebola virus), the viral matrix (M) protein contains all of the information needed for budding, since virus-like particles (VLPs) are efficiently released from cells when the M protein is expressed from cDNA. To investigate the requirements for budding of the paramyxovirus simian virus 5 (SV5), its M protein was expressed in mammalian cells, and it was found that SV5 M protein alone could not induce vesicle budding and was not secreted from cells. Coexpression of M protein with the viral hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) or fusion (F) glycoproteins also failed to result in significant VLP release. It was found that M protein in the form of VLPs was only secreted from cells, with an efficiency comparable to authentic virus budding, when M protein was coexpressed with one of the two glycoproteins, HN or F, together with the nucleocapsid (NP) protein. The VLPs appeared similar morphologically to authentic virions by electron microscopy. CsCl density gradient centrifugation indicated that almost all of the NP protein in the cells had assembled into nucleocapsid-like structures. Deletion of the F and HN cytoplasmic tails indicated an important role of these cytoplasmic tails in VLP budding. Furthermore, truncation of the HN cytoplasmic tail was found to be inhibitory toward budding, since it prevented coexpressed wild-type (wt) F protein from directing VLP budding. Conversely, truncation of the F protein cytoplasmic tail was not inhibitory and did not affect the ability of coexpressed wt HN protein to direct the budding of particles. Taken together, these data suggest that multiple viral components, including assembled nucleocapsids, have important roles in the paramyxovirus budding process.  相似文献   

8.
Mouse hepatitis virus and Sendai virus are among the most common viruses naturally infecting laboratory mice. Concanavalin A-stimulated in vitro proliferative responses of splenocytes were examined after infection of BALB/cByJ mice with the JHM strain of mouse hepatitis virus (MHV-JHM) or Sendai virus. Mice were exposed to these viruses by presumed natural routes (per os or intranasally). Immunodepression was marked but transient among BALB/cByJ mice exposed to MHV-JHM. Among mice exposed to Sendai virus and examined over a 21-day period, spleen cells from only one mouse, sacrificed 10 days postinoculation, exhibited a severely impaired ability to respond to concanavalin A. Lymphokine production by spleen cells from control and infected mice was then assessed. IL 2 was either absent or present at very low levels in culture supernates of concanavalin A-unresponsive spleen cells from MHV-JHM-infected mice. Spleen cells from the single Sendai virus-infected mouse also produced very low levels of IL 2. In contrast, IL 1 was detected in supernatants of all spleen cell cultures derived from control, MHV-JHM-infected, or Sendai virus-infected mice. There was not a clear correlation between concanavalin A responsiveness and the ability of spleen cells to produce interferon-gamma. These results stress the importance of using laboratory mice of known microbiological status for immunologic experiments.  相似文献   

9.
While the molecular basis of fusion (F) protein refolding during membrane fusion has been studied extensively in vitro, little is known about the biological significance of membrane fusion activity in parainfluenza virus replication and pathogenesis in vivo. Two recombinant Sendai viruses, F-L179V and F-K180Q, were generated that contain F protein mutations in the heptad repeat A region of the ectodomain, a region of the protein known to regulate F protein activation. In vitro, the F-L179V virus caused increased syncytium formation (cell-cell membrane fusion) yet had a rate of replication and levels of F protein expression and cleavage similar to wild-type virus. The F-K180Q virus had a reduced replication rate along with reduced levels of F protein expression, cleavage, and fusogenicity. In DBA/2 mice, the hyperfusogenic F-L179V virus induced greater morbidity and mortality than wild-type virus, while the attenuated F-K180Q virus was much less pathogenic. During the first week of infection, virus replication and inflammation in the lungs were similar for wild-type and F-L179V viruses. After approximately 1 week of infection, the clearance of F-L179V virus was delayed, and more extensive interstitial inflammation and necrosis were observed in the lungs, affecting entire lobes of the lungs and having significantly greater numbers of syncytial cell masses in alveolar spaces on day 10. On the other hand, the slower-growing F-K180Q virus caused much less extensive inflammation than wild-type virus, presumably due to its reduced replication rate, and did not cause observable syncytium formation in the lungs. Overall, the results show that residues in the heptad repeat A region of the F protein modulate the virulence of Sendai virus in mice by influencing both the spread and clearance of the virus and the extent and severity of inflammation. An understanding of how the F protein contributes to infection and inflammation in vivo may assist in the development of antiviral therapies against respiratory paramyxoviruses.Sendai virus (SeV), a murine parainfluenza virus (PIV), belongs to the genus Respirovirus within the family Paramyxoviridae (33). Sendai virus is the murine counterpart of human parainfluenza virus 1 (HPIV1), and these two viruses share high sequence homology and antigenic cross-reactivity (23, 38, 58). Both Sendai virus and HPIV1 cause respiratory diseases in their hosts that range from mild to severe, with the greatest morbidity and mortality occurring in immunocompromised hosts (3, 17). In pediatric medicine, HPIV1 is an important cause of bronchiolitis, pneumonia, and laryngotracheobronchitis, or croup (11). Other members of the genus Respirovirus include human and bovine forms of PIV3 (30).Like other paramyxoviruses, Sendai virus is an enveloped, nonsegmented, negative-strand RNA virus that invades host cells by fusion (F) protein-mediated membrane fusion at the plasma membrane (33). The receptor binding protein for Sendai virus, as well as the other parainfluenza viruses, is the hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) protein. During viral entry, the HN protein binds sialic acid-containing receptors on the surfaces of host cells and then triggers the F protein to refold and cause membrane fusion (34, 40). Paramyxovirus replication occurs in the cytoplasm of infected cells, where the viral nucleocapsid is formed by the encapsidation of the viral genome with the viral nucleoprotein (N), phosphoprotein (P), and the large RNA-dependent RNA-polymerase (L) protein (33). The assembly and budding of infectious parainfluenza virions from the plasma membrane are mediated largely by the matrix (M) protein, which interacts with the viral nucleocapsid and the cytoplasmic tails of the HN and F proteins (56, 63).The paramyxovirus F protein mediates both virus-cell fusion and cell-cell fusion. Similar to other class I viral fusion proteins, paramyxovirus F proteins are expressed on the surfaces of infected cells and virions as trimers that are trapped in metastable (high energy) conformations (29, 54, 71, 73). In order to become activated for membrane fusion, uncleaved F0 precursor protein trimers must be cleaved into a fusion-capable complex formed by F1 and F2 subunits (55). Field isolates of Sendai virus that have a monobasic cleavage site are cleavage activated by tryptase Clara secreted from respiratory epithelial cells (32, 69) while the pantropic F1-R laboratory isolate of Sendai virus has a mutated cleavage site and is cleaved by more ubiquitously expressed proteases (41, 67). Paramyxovirus F proteins have several regions involved in F protein conformational changes during membrane fusion: a hydrophobic fusion peptide, two 4-3 heptad repeat regions (designated heptad repeat A [HRA] and HRB), a transmembrane domain, and a cytoplasmic tail. The prefusion form of the PIV5 F0 protein has a mushroom-like shape formed by a large globular head attached to a rod-like stalk formed by the HRB region (76). Upon triggering by the HN protein, the HRB region dissociates, the HRA region springs into a coiled coil, and the fusion peptide is inserted into the target membrane (52). Membrane fusion is catalyzed by the formation of a coiled-coil hairpin structure (2, 7, 75, 78), formed by the HRA and HRB regions, that juxtaposes the membrane-interacting fusion peptide and transmembrane domains (52). We recently performed a mutational analysis on a 10-residue sequence in the HRA region of the Sendai virus F protein (37) that forms a β-strand-turn-α-helix structure in the prefusion conformation and part of a triple-stranded coiled coil in the hairpin conformation (75, 76). The mutated residues were found to play important roles in regulating the activation and membrane fusion activity of the Sendai virus F protein, showing that F protein refolding is regulated by residues that undergo dramatic changes in secondary and tertiary structure between the prefusion and hairpin conformations.Upon triggering by the HN protein, cell surface-expressed F protein trimers mediate cell-cell fusion (syncytium formation) and extend infection in a local area (55). In nonpolarized epithelial cells, virus-induced syncytium formation has long been considered a hallmark of in vitro cytopathogenesis by respiratory paramyxoviruses. However, many questions remain regarding the extent of envelope glycoprotein expression, parainfluenza virus budding, and syncytium formation at the basolateral surfaces of polarized cells (4, 77). In an in vitro model of human airway epithelium (HAE), HPIV3 has been shown to infect ciliated epithelial cells exclusively, predominantly at the apical surface, causing little virus-mediated cytopathology, no spread of the virus beyond ciliated cells, and no syncytium formation (77). As the HAE model lacks innate and adaptive immune cells, this model would not reveal the formation of syncytia involving all cell types in the respiratory tract that are present during infection, including those that play a role in the host response to infection. In immunocompetent mice, the replication of field isolates of Sendai virus is restricted to the respiratory tract, and progeny virions bud from the apical surfaces of polarized epithelial cells (68). While syncytial cell formation in the bronchiolar epithelia of mice infected with Sendai virus has been reported previously (28), the timing of giant cell formation and its contribution to the spread of the virus and the disease it induces in the respiratory tract remain unknown.To test the hypothesis that the fusogenicity of the F protein contributes to the pathogenicity of Sendai virus in mice, the natural host of this virus, we generated two recombinant Sendai viruses containing F protein mutations in the heptad repeat A region that were found previously to either increase or decrease its fusogenic activity when the F protein was expressed from plasmid DNA constructs (37). In the present study, the effects of the F protein mutations on virus replication, F protein expression, F protein cleavage, and syncytium formation were characterized in vitro. The hyperfusogenic F-L179V virus was found to induce greater morbidity and mortality in DBA/2 mice than wild-type virus, whereas the hypofusogenic and attenuated F-K180Q virus was found to be much less pathogenic. After 1 week of infection, the F-L179V virus induced more extensive interstitial inflammation and necrosis in the lungs than the wild-type virus, including a greater number of syncytial cell masses. On the other hand, the attenuated F-K180Q virus caused much less extensive inflammation than wild-type virus and did not cause observable syncytium formation in the lungs. A comparison of 50% minimal lethal dose (MLD50) values, lung titers, and histopathologic changes reveals a correlation between the membrane fusion activity of the F protein and the virulence of Sendai virus in mice.  相似文献   

10.
A trypsin-resistant mutant of Sendai virus, TR-2, which could be activated by chymotrypsin but not by trypsin or the protease present in mouse lung, was inoculated intranasally into mice after being activated in vitro. TR-2 hardly brought about clinical illness or lung lesions in mice; the protease present in the lung could not activate the progeny virus, and the infection terminated after one-step replication. Nevertheless, the immunoglobulin A antibody against wild-type Sendai virus was produced in the respiratory tracts as well as the serum immunoglobulin G antibody, and the mice were protected from the challenge of the wild-type Sendai virus. On the basis of these results, TR-2 may provide a new model of live vaccine for paramyxoviruses; its availability as a live vaccine is also discussed.  相似文献   

11.
We have analyzed the mechanism by which M protein interacts with components of the viral envelope during Sendai virus assembly. Using recombinant vaccinia viruses to selectively express combinations of Sendai virus F, HN, and M proteins, we have successfully reconstituted M protein-glycoprotein interaction in vivo and determined the molecular interactions which are necessary and sufficient to promote M protein-membrane binding. Our results showed that M protein accumulates on cellular membranes via a direct interaction with both F and HN proteins. Specifically, our data demonstrated that a small fraction (8 to 16%) of M protein becomes membrane associated in the absence of Sendai virus glycoproteins, while > 75% becomes membrane bound in the presence of both F and HN proteins. Selective expression of M protein together with either F or HN protein showed that each viral glycoprotein is individually sufficient to promote efficient (56 to 73%) M protein-membrane binding. Finally, we observed that M protein associates with cellular membranes in a time-dependent manner, implying a need for either maturation or transport before binding to glycoproteins.  相似文献   

12.
Role of Matrix and Fusion Proteins in Budding of Sendai Virus   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
Paramyxoviruses are assembled at the surface of infected cells, where virions are formed by the process of budding. We investigated the roles of three Sendai virus (SV) membrane proteins in the production of virus-like particles. Expression of matrix (M) proteins from cDNA induced the budding and release of virus-like particles that contained M, as was previously observed with human parainfluenza virus type 1 (hPIV1). Expression of SV fusion (F) glycoprotein from cDNA caused the release of virus-like particles bearing surface F, although their release was less efficient than that of particles bearing M protein. Cells that expressed only hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) released no HN-containing vesicles. Coexpression of M and F proteins enhanced the release of F protein by a factor greater than 4. The virus-like particles containing F and M were found in different density gradient fractions of the media of cells that coexpressed M and F, a finding that suggests that the two proteins formed separate vesicles and did not interact directly. Vesicles released by M or F proteins also contained cellular actin; therefore, actin may be involved in the budding process induced by viral M or F proteins. Deletion of C-terminal residues of M protein, which has a sequence similar to that of an actin-binding domain, significantly reduced release of the particles into medium. Site-directed mutagenesis of the cytoplasmic tail of F revealed two regions that affect the efficiency of budding: one domain comprising five consecutive amino acids conserved in SV and hPIV1 and one domain that is similar to the actin-binding domain required for budding induced by M protein. Our results indicate that both M and F proteins are able to drive the budding of SV and propose the possible role of actin in the budding process.  相似文献   

13.
The replication of LLC-MK2-grown noninfectious Sendai virus, containing exclusively fusion (F) glycoprotein precursors, was examined in the mouse lung to study the accessibility of virus inoculated intranasally to the virus activator present in the lung. When mice were intranasally inoculated with various doses of the virus after in vitro activation with trypsin, the 50% mouse infectious dose (MID50) was determined to be 0.7 cell-infectious units (CIU) per mouse, indicating that one infectious unit of Sendai virus is enough to initiate replication in the mouse lung and that the present experimental system is highly sensitive. On the other hand, in mice inoculated with virus not treated with trypsin, virus replication in the lung was recognized even in mice inoculated with samples containing no infectious virus, and the MID50 was determined to be 67.5 CIU per mouse (here, CIU were assayed after in vitro trypsin treatment). When mice were infected with 20 MID50 of trypsin-treated infectious and untreated noninfectious viruses (an approximately 100-fold greater amount of noninfectious virus than of infectious virus was used), the noninfectious virus was found to require 2 more days of incubation than the infectious virus, and many of the F proteins synthesized in the lungs of mice infected with the F0-containing virus were present in the cleaved form. In addition, the infection of mice with noninfectious virus was strongly suppressed by aprotinin, a serine protease inhibitor. These results indicate that Sendai virus can initiate replication in the mouse lung even with the F0-containing noninfectious virus and strongly suggest that this infection process is mediated by cleavage activation of the F0 proteins of inoculated viruses by a serine protease(s) present in the lumen of the mouse respiratory tract but that activation of the noninfectious virus is an inefficient process.  相似文献   

14.
The efficient release of many enveloped viruses from cells involves the coalescence of viral components at sites of budding on the plasma membrane of infected cells. This coalescence is believed to require interactions between the cytoplasmic tails of surface glycoproteins and the matrix (M) protein. For the paramyxovirus simian virus 5 (SV5), the cytoplasmic tail of the hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN) protein has been shown previously to be important for normal virus budding. To investigate a role for the cytoplasmic tail of the fusion (F) protein in virus assembly and budding, we generated a series of F cytoplasmic tail-truncated recombinant viruses. Analysis of these viruses in tissue culture indicated that the cytoplasmic tail of the F protein was dispensable for normal virus replication and budding. To investigate further the requirements for assembly and budding of SV5, we generated two double-mutant recombinant viruses that lack 8 amino acids of the predicted 17-amino-acid HN protein cytoplasmic tail in combination with truncation of either 10 or 18 amino acids from the predicted 20-amino-acid F protein cytoplasmic tail. Both of the double mutant recombinant viruses displayed a replication defect in tissue culture and a budding defect, the extent of which was dependent on the length of the remaining F cytoplasmic tail. Taken together, this work and our earlier data on virus-like particle formation (A. P. Schmitt, G. P. Leser, D. L. Waning, and R. A. Lamb, J. Virol. 76:3953-3964, 2002) suggest a redundant role for the cytoplasmic tails of the HN and F proteins in virus assembly and budding.  相似文献   

15.
House mice (Mus domesticus) were recently introduced to Thevenard Island, off the northwest coast of Western Australia. This island is also habitat for an endangered native rodent, the short-tailed mouse (Leggadina lakedownensis). Concerns have been raised that house mice may pose a threat to L. lakedownensis both through competition and as a source of infection. To assess the threat to L. lakedownensis posed by viral pathogens from M. domesticus, a serological survey was conducted from 1994 to 1996 of both species for evidence of infection with 14 common murine viruses (mouse hepatitis virus, murine cytomegalovirus, lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus, ectromelia virus, mouse adenovirus strains FL and K87, minute virus of mice, mouse parvovirus, reovirus type 3, Sendai virus, Theiler's mouse encephalomyelitis virus, polyoma virus, pneumonia virus of mice, and encephalomyocarditis virus) and Mycoplasma pulmonis. Despite previous evidence that populations of free-living M. domesticus from various locations on the Australian mainland were infected with up to eight viruses, M. domesticus on Thevenard Island were seropositive only to murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV). Antibodies to MCMV were detected in this species at all times of sampling, although seroprevalence varied. Infectious MCMV could be isolated in culture of salivary gland homogenates from seropositive mice. In contrast, L. lakedownensis on Thevenard Island showed no serological evidence of infection with MCMV, any of the other murine viruses, or M. Pulmonis, and no virus could be isolated in culture from salivary gland homogenates. Although MCMV replicated to high titers in experimentally infected inbred BALB/c laboratory mice as expected, it did not replicate in the target organs of experimentally inoculated L. lakedownensis, indicating that the strict host specificity of MCMV may prevent its infection of L. lakedownensis. These results suggest that native mice on Thevenard Island are not at risk of MCMV infection from introduced house mice, and raise interesting questions about the possible selective survival of MCMV in small isolated populations of M. domesticus.  相似文献   

16.
M Itoh  T D Ming  T Hayashi  Y Mochizuki    M Homma 《Journal of virology》1990,64(11):5660-5664
A protease-activation mutant of Sendai virus, TCs, was isolated from a trypsin-resistant mutant, TR-5. TCs was activated in vitro by both trypsin and chymotrypsin. TCs was, however, less sensitive to trypsin and chymotrypsin than were the wild-type virus and TR-5, respectively. F protein of TCs had a single amino acid substitution at residue 114 from glutamine to arginine, resulting in the appearance of the new cleavage site for trypsin and the shift of the cleavage site for chymotrypsin. Activation of TCs in the lungs of mice occurred less efficiently than that of the wild type, and TCs caused a less severe pneumopathogenicity than did the wild-type virus, which supports our previous view that the in vitro trypsin sensitivity of Sendai virus can be a good indication of pneumopathogenicity in mice.  相似文献   

17.
From 1988 to 1997, a total of 69 mouse colonies and 36 rat colonies were examined for the presence of antibodies to 14 indigenous viruses of mice and rats. Among mouse viruses, high positivity rates were observed with mouse hepatitis virus (MHV), Theiler's encephalomyelitis virus (THEMV), minute virus of mice (MVM), Sendai virus and pneumonia virus of mice (PVM); the prevalence rates were high in rats with Khilam's rat virus (KRV), THEMV, Toolan's H-1 virus, Sendai virus, Parker's rat coronavirus (RCV/SDA) and PVM. During the last decade, the prevalence of some agents such as MHV, Sendai virus, THEMV, PVM and MVM has apparently decreased although they were still present in 1997 (except for PVM). Another point is the constant increase of colonies found free of viruses through this decade, demonstrating the efforts of the French research community to increase the quality of hygiene in laboratory animals.  相似文献   

18.
M Tashiro  Y Fujii  K Nakamura    M Homma 《Journal of virology》1988,62(7):2490-2497
Our previous study has shown that, although a trypsin-resistant mutant of Sendai virus, TR-2, replicates only in a single cycle in mouse lung with a negligible lesion, the animal acquires a strong immunity against lethal infection with wild-type Sendai virus, suggesting that TR-2 could be used as a new type of live vaccine (M. Tashiro and M. Homma, J. Virol. 53:228-234, 1985). In the present study, we investigated the immunological response elicited in TR-2-infected mice, particularly with respect to cell-mediated immunity. Analyses of cytotoxic activities of spleen cells with 51Cr release assays revealed that Sendai virus-specific T lymphocytes (CTL), in addition to natural killer activity and antiviral antibodies, were induced in DBA/2 and C3H/He mice infected intranasally with TR-2. Proteolytic activation of the fusion glycoprotein F was required for the primary induction of CTL, though not necessarily for stimulation of natural killer and antibody responses. Memory of the CTL induced by TR-2 was long-lasting and was recalled in vivo immediately after challenge with wild-type Sendai virus. In contrast to TR-2, immunization with inactive split vaccine failed to induce the CTL response, but it elicited a high titer of serum antibody and a low level of natural killer activity.  相似文献   

19.
For many enveloped viruses, cellular multivesicular body (MVB) sorting machinery has been reported to be utilized for efficient viral budding. Matrix and Gag proteins have been shown to contain one or two L-domain motifs (PPxY, PT/SAP, YPDL, and FPIV), some of which interact specifically with host cellular proteins involved in MVB sorting, which are recruited to the viral budding site. However, for many enveloped viruses, L-domain motifs have not yet been identified and the involvement of MVB sorting machinery in viral budding is still unknown. Here we show that both Sendai virus (SeV) matrix protein M and accessory protein C contribute to virus budding by physically interacting with Alix/AIP1. A YLDL sequence within the M protein showed L-domain activity, and its specific interaction with the N terminus of Alix/AIP1(1-211) was important for the budding of virus-like particles (VLPs) of M protein. In addition, M-VLP budding was inhibited by the overexpression of some deletion mutant forms of Alix/AIP1 and depletion of endogenous Alix/AIP1 with specific small interfering RNAs. The YLDL sequence was not replaceable by other L-domain motifs, such as PPxY and PT/SAP, and even YPxL. C protein was also able to physically interact with the N terminus of Alix/AIP1(212-357) and enhanced M-VLP budding independently of M-Alix/AIP1 interaction, although it was not released from the transfected cells itself. Our results suggest that the interaction of multiple viral proteins with Alix/AIP1 may enhance the efficiency of the utilization of cellular MVB sorting machinery for efficient SeV budding.  相似文献   

20.
Viral matrix proteins of several enveloped RNA viruses play important roles in virus assembly and budding and are by themselves able to bud from the cell surface in the form of lipid-enveloped, virus-like particles (VLPs). Three motifs (PT/SAP, PPxY, and YxxL) have been identified as late budding domains (L-domains) responsible for efficient budding. L-domains can functionally interact with cellular proteins involved in vacuolar sorting (VPS4A and TSG101) and endocytic pathways (Nedd4), suggesting involvement of these pathways in virus budding. Ebola virus VP40 has overlapping PTAP and PPEY motifs, which can functionally interact with TSG101 and Nedd4, respectively. As for vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), a PPPY motif within M protein can interact with Nedd4. In addition, M protein has a PSAP sequence downstream of the PPPY motif, but the function of PSAP in budding is not clear. In this study, we compared L-domain functions between Ebola virus and VSV by constructing a chimeric M protein (M40), in which the PPPY motif of VSV M is replaced by the L domains of VP40. The budding efficiency of M40 was 10-fold higher than that of wild-type (wt) M protein. Overexpression of a dominant negative mutant of VPS4A or depletion of cellular TSG101 reduced the budding of only M40-containing VLPs but not that of wt M VLPs or live VSV. These findings suggest that the PSAP motif of M protein is not critical for budding and that there are fundamental differences between PTAP-containing viruses (Ebola virus and human immunodeficiency virus type 1) and PPPY-containing viruses (VSV and rabies virus) regarding their dependence on specific host factors for efficient budding.  相似文献   

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