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1.
Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) is a natural pathogen of the mouse. The different strains of TMEV are divided into two subgroups according to the pathology they provoke. The neurovirulent strains GDVII and FA induce an acute fatal encephalitis, while persistent strains, like DA and BeAn, cause a chronic demyelinating disease associated with viral persistence in the central nervous system. Different receptor usage was proposed to account for most of the phenotype difference between neurovirulent and persistent strains. Persistent but not neurovirulent strains were shown to bind sialic acid. We characterized DA and GDVII derivatives adapted to grow on CHO-K1 cells. Expression of glycosaminoglycans did not influence infection of CHO-K1 cells by parental and adapted viruses. Mutations resulting from adaptation of DA and GDVII to CHO-K1 cells notably mapped to the well-characterized VP1 CD and VP2 EF loops of the capsid. Adaptation of the DA virus to CHO-K1 cells correlated with decreased sialic acid usage for entry. In contrast, adaptation of the GDVII virus to CHO-K1 cells correlated with the appearance of a weak sialic acid usage for entry. The sialic acid binding capacity of the GDVII variant resulted from a single amino acid mutation (VP1-51, Asn-->Ser) located out of the sialic acid binding region defined for virus DA. Mutations affecting tropism in vitro and sialic acid binding dramatically affected the persistence and neurovirulence of the viruses.  相似文献   

2.
J Fu  M Rodriguez    R P Roos 《Journal of virology》1990,64(12):6345-6348
The GDVII strain and other members of the GDVII subgroup of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis viruses (TMEV) cause an acute lethal neuronal infection in mice, whereas the DA strain and other members of the TO subgroup of TMEV cause a chronic demyelinating disease associated with a persistent virus infection. We used GDVII/DA chimeric infectious cDNAs to produce intratypic recombinant viruses in order to clarify reasons for the TMEV subgroup-specific difference in demyelinating activity. We found that both the GDVII and DA strains contain a genetic determinant(s) for demyelinating activity. No demyelination occurs following GDVII strain inoculation because this strain produces an early neuronal disease that kills mice before white matter disease and persistent infection can occur.  相似文献   

3.
L Zhou  X Lin  T J Green  H L Lipton    M Luo 《Journal of virology》1997,71(12):9701-9712
Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis viruses (TMEVs) belong to the Picornaviridae family and are divided into two groups, typified by strain GDVII virus and members of the TO (Theiler's original) group. The highly virulent GDVII group causes acute encephalitis in mice, while the TO group is less virulent and causes a chronic demyelinating disease which is associated with viral persistence in mice. This persistent central nervous system infection with demyelination resembles multiple sclerosis (MS) in humans and has thus become an important model for studying MS. It has been shown that some of the determinants associated with viral persistence are located on the capsid proteins of the TO group. Structural comparisons of two persistent strains (BeAn and DA) and a highly virulent strain (GDVII) showed that the most significant structural variations between these two groups of viruses are located on the sites that may influence virus binding to cellular receptors. Most animal viruses attach to specific cellular receptors that, in part, determine host range and tissue tropism. In this study, atomic models of TMEV chimeras were built with the known structures of GDVII, BeAn, and DA viruses. Comparisons among the known GDVII, BeAn, and DA structures as well as the predicted models for the TMEV chimeras suggested that a gap on the capsid surface next to the putative receptor binding site, composed of residues from VP1 and VP2, may be important in determining viral persistence by influencing virus attachment to cellular receptors, such as sialyloligosaccharides. Our results showed that sialyllactose, the first three sugar molecules of common oligosaccharides on the surface of mammalian cells, inhibits virus binding to the host cell and infection with the persistent BeAn virus but not the nonpersistent GDVII and chimera 39 viruses.  相似文献   

4.
Cellular apoptosis induced by viral genes can play a critical role in determining virulence as well as viral persistence. This form of cell death has been of interest with respect to Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) because the GDVII strain and members of the GDVII subgroup are highly neurovirulent, while the DA strain and members of the TO subgroup induce a chronic progressive inflammatory demyelination with persistence of the virus in the central nervous system. The TMEV L protein has been identified as important in the pathogenesis of Theiler's virus-induced demyelinating disease (TMEV-IDD). We now show that DA L is apoptotic following transfection of L expression constructs or following DA virus infection of HeLa cells; the apoptotic activity depends on the presence of the serine/threonine domain of L, especially a serine at amino acid 57. In contrast, GDVII L has little apoptotic activity following transfection of L expression constructs in HeLa cells and is antiapoptotic following GDVII infection of HeLa cells. Of note, both DA and GDVII L cleave caspase-3 in BHK-21 cells, although neither implements the full apoptotic machinery in this cell type as manifested by the induction of terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling (TUNEL) staining. The differences in apoptotic activities of DA and GDVII L in varied cell types may play an important role in TMEV subgroup-specific disease phenotypes.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Mena I  Roussarie JP  Brahic M 《Journal of virology》2004,78(23):13356-13361
We compared the infection of bone marrow macrophages by the DA and GDVII strains of Theiler's virus and by two viruses constructed by exchanging the DA and GDVII capsids. The replication of the GDVII strain and of both chimeric viruses was restricted in macrophages. Therefore, the infection of macrophages requires both capsid and noncapsid viral determinants.  相似文献   

7.
Strain GDVII and other members of the GDVII subgroup of Theiler’s murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) are highly virulent and cause acute polioencephalomyelitis in mice. Neither viral persistence nor demyelination is demonstrated in the few surviving mice. On the other hand, strain DA and other members of the TO subgroup of TMEV are less virulent and establish a persistent infection in the spinal cord, which results in a demyelinating disease. We previously reported that GDVII does not actively replicate in a murine macrophage-like cell line, J774-1, whereas DA strain productively infects these cells (M. Obuchi, Y. Ohara, T. Takegami, T. Murayama, H. Takada, and H. Iizuka, J. Virol. 71:729–733, 1997). In the present study, we used recombinant viruses between these strains of the two subgroups to demonstrate that the DA L coding region of DA strain is important for virus growth in J774-1 cells. Additional experiments with a mutant virus indicate that L* protein, which is synthesized out of frame with the polyprotein from an additional alternative initiation codon in the L coding region of TO subgroup strains, is a key determinant responsible for the cell-type-specific restriction of virus growth. L* protein may play a critical role in the DA-induced restricted demyelinating infection by allowing growth in macrophages, a major site for virus persistence.  相似文献   

8.
The DA strain of Theiler's virus, a murine picornavirus, causes a persistent infection of glial cells of the white matter of the spinal cord, associated with chronic inflammation and primary demyelination. The GDVII strain causes an acute fatal grey matter encephalomyelitis. We characterized the target cells of GDVII and DA viruses 4 days following intracerebral inoculation, and we compared the levels of viral RNA within these cells. GDVII virus infected approximately 10 times more cells than DA virus. Whereas GDVII virus infected neurons exclusively, DA virus infected also astrocytes and possible macrophage-microglial cells. The levels of viral RNA in neurons infected with GDVII and DA viruses were of the same order. These results show that DA virus infects glial cells already at the beginning of the disease and that the more efficient spread of GDVII virus is probably not due to a higher level of RNA replication per cell.  相似文献   

9.
GDVII subgroup strains of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) are highly virulent and produce acute polioencephalomyelitis in mice. Neither viral persistence nor demyelination is demonstrated in the few surviving mice. In contrast, DA subgroup strains are less virulent and establish a persistent central nervous system infection which results in demyelinating disease. We previously reported a subgroup-specific infection in a macrophage-like cell line, J774-1 cells; i.e., GDVII strain does not replicate in J774-1 cells, whereas the DA strain actively replicates in these cells. In addition, this subgroup-specific virus growth is shown to be related to the presence of L* protein, a 17 kDa protein translated out-of-frame of the viral polyprotein from an AUG located 13 nucleotides downstream from the polyprotein's AUG. The present paper demonstrated that this subgroup-specific infection is observed in murine monocyte/macrophage lineage cell lines, but not in other murine cell lines including neural cells. An RNase protection assay also suggested that L* protein-related virus growth is regulated at the step of viral RNA replication. As macrophages are reported to be the major cell harboring virus during the chronic demyelinating stage, the activity of L* protein with respect to virus growth in macrophages may be a key factor in clarifying the mechanism(s) of TMEV persistence, which is probably a trigger to spinal cord demyelination.  相似文献   

10.
Infection of C57BL/6 mice by the intracerebral route with the Daniels (DA) strain of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) resulted in acute behavioral seizures in approximately 50% of the mice. By titration, the viral dose correlated with the percentage of mice developing seizures; however, neuropathological changes were similar over the dose range, and viral clearance from the brains occurred uniformly by day 14 postinfection (p.i.). Other TMEV strains and mutants (GDVII, WW, BeAn 8386 [BeAn], DApBL2M, H101) induced seizures in C57BL/6 mice to various degrees. The BeAn strain and DApBL2M mutant were similar to the DA strain in the percentages of mice developing seizures and neuropathological changes and in the extent of infected cells. The GDVII and WW strains caused 100% mortality by days 5 and 6 p.i., respectively, at which time neuropathological changes and neuronal infection were extensive. The H101 mutant induced seizures and caused 100% mortality by day 7 p.i.; however, only minor neuropathological changes and few infected cells were observed. Thus, in H101 mutant infections, it appears that elevated levels of cytokines, rather than neuronal cell death, play the dominant role in seizure induction.  相似文献   

11.
Theiler's murine encephalitis viruses (TMEV) are divided into two subgroups based on their neurovirulence. Persistent strains resemble Theiler's original viruses (referred to as the TO subgroup), which largely induce a subclinical polioencephalomyelitis during the acute phase of the disease and can persist in the spinal cord of susceptible animals, inducing a chronic demyelinating disease. In contrast, members of the neurovirulent subgroup cause an acute encephalitis characterized by the rapid onset of paralysis and death within days following intracranial inoculation. We report herein the characterization of a novel neurovirulent strain of TMEV, identified using pyrosequencing technology and referred to as NIHE. Complete coverage of the NIHE viral genome was obtained, and it shares <90% nucleotide sequence identity to known TMEV strains irrespective of subgroup, with the greatest sequence variability being observed in genes encoding the leader and capsid proteins. The histopathological analysis of infected brain and spinal cord demonstrate inflammatory lesions and neuronal necrosis during acute infection with no evidence of viral persistence or chronic disease. Intriguingly, genetic analysis indicates the putative expression of the L protein, considered a hallmark of strains within the persistent subgroup. Thus, the identification and characterization of a novel neurovirulent TMEV strain sharing features previously associated with both subgroups will lead to a deeper understanding of the evolution of TMEV strains and new insights into the determinants of neurovirulence.  相似文献   

12.
The genome of picornaviruses contains a large open reading frame (ORF) translated as a precursor polypeptide that is processed to yield all the proteins necessary for the viral life cycle. In persistent but not in neurovirulent strains of Theiler's virus, an overlapping ORF encodes an additional 18-kDa protein called L*. We confirmed previous work showing that the L* ORF of persistent strains facilitates the infection of macrophage cell lines, and we present evidence that this effect is due to the L* protein itself rather than to competition for the translation of the two overlapping ORFs. The introduction of an AUG codon to restore the L* ORF of the neurovirulent GDVII strain also enhanced the infection of macrophages, in spite of the divergent evolution of this protein. The presence or the absence of the L* AUG initiation codon had only a weak influence on the neurovirulence of the GDVII strain and on the persistence of the DA1 strain. The results obtained with DA1 in vivo contrast with the results reported previously for DAFL3, another molecular clone of the same virus strain, where the AUG-to-ACG mutation of the L* initiation codon totally blocked viral persistence (G. D. Ghadge, L. Ma, S. Sato, J. Kim, and R. P. Roos, J. Virol. 72:8605-8612, 1998). Thus, a factor that is critical for the persistence of a given clone of Theiler's virus is dispensable for the persistence of a closely related clone, indicating that different adjustments in the expression of persistence determinants occur in related viral strains.  相似文献   

13.
Zhou L  Luo Y  Wu Y  Tsao J  Luo M 《Journal of virology》2000,74(3):1477-1485
Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) is a picornavirus of the Cardiovirus genus. Certain strains of TMEV may cause a chronic demyelinating disease, which is very similar to multiple sclerosis in humans, associated with a persistent viral infection in the mouse central nervous system (CNS). Other strains of TMEV only cause an acute infection without persistence in the CNS. It has been shown that sialic acid is a receptor moiety only for the persistent TMEV strains and not for the nonpersistent strains. We report the effect of sialylation on cell surface on entry and the complex structure of DA virus, a persistent TMEV, and the receptor moiety mimic, sialyllactose, refined to a resolution of 3.0 A. The ligand binds to a pocket on the viral surface, composed mainly of the amino acid residues from capsid protein VP2 puff B, in the vicinity of the VP1 loop and VP3 C terminus. The interaction of the receptor moiety with the persistent DA strain provides new understanding for the demyelinating persistent infection in the mouse CNS by TMEV.  相似文献   

14.
The distribution, spread, neuropathology, tropism, and persistence of the neurovirulent GDVII strain of Theiler's virus in the central nervous system (CNS) was investigated in mice susceptible and resistant to chronic demyelinating infection with TO strains. Following intracerebral inoculation, the virus spread rapidly to specific areas of the CNS. There were, however, specific structures in which infection was consistently undetectable. Virus spread both between adjacent cell bodies and along neuronal pathways. The distribution of the infection was dependent on the site of inoculation. The majority of viral RNA-positive cells were neurons. Many astrocytes were also positive. Infection of both of these cell types was lytic. In contrast, viral RNA-positive oligodendrocytes were rare and were observed only in well-established areas of infection. The majority of oligodendrocytes in these areas were viral RNA negative and were often the major cell type remaining; however, occasional destruction of these cells was observed. No differences in any of the above parameters were observed between CBA and BALB/c mice, susceptible and resistant, respectively, to chronic CNS demyelinating infection with TO strains of Theiler's virus. By using Southern blot hybridization to detect reverse-transcribed PCR-amplified viral RNA sequences, no virus persistence could be detected in the CNS of immunized mice surviving infection with GDVII. In conclusion, the GDVII strain of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus cannot persist in the CNS, but this is not consequent upon an inability to infect glial cells, including oligodendrocytes.  相似文献   

15.
Theiler's virus is a neurotropic murine picornavirus which, depending on the strain, causes either an acute encephalitis or a persistent demyelinating disease. Following intracranial inoculation, the demyelinating strains infect sequentially the grey matter of the brain, the grey matter of the spinal cord, and finally the white matter of the spinal cord, where they persist and cause chronic demyelination. The neurovirulent strains cause a generally fatal encephalitis with lytic infection of neurons. The study of chimeric Theiler's viruses, obtained by recombining the genomes of demyelinating and neurovirulent strains, has shown that the viral capsid contains determinants for persistence and demyelination. In this article we describe the recombinant virus R5, in which the capsid protein VP1 and a small portion of protein 2A come from the neurovirulent GDVII strain and the rest of the genome comes from the persistent DA strain. The capsid of virus R5 also contains one mutation at amino acid 34 of VP3 (Asn-->His). Virus R5 does not persist in the central nervous system (CNS) of immunocompetent SJL/J or BALB/c mice. However, it replicates efficiently and persists in the CNS of BALB/c nu/nu mice, showing that its growth in the CNS is not impaired. In BALB/c nu/nu mice, whereas virus DA causes mortality with large amounts of viral antigens in the white matter of the spinal cord, virus R5 does not kill the animals, persists in the neurons of the grey matter of the brain, and never reaches the white matter of the spinal cord. This phenotype is due to the chimerism of the capsid and/or to the mutation in VP3. These results indicate that the capsid plays an important role in the characteristic migration of Theiler's virus within the CNS.  相似文献   

16.
The low-neurovirulence Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis viruses (TMEV), such as BeAn virus, cause a persistent infection of the central nervous system (CNS) in susceptible mouse strains that results in inflammatory demyelination. The ability of TMEV to persist in the mouse CNS has traditionally been demonstrated by recovering infectious virus from the spinal cord. Results of infectivity assays led to the notion that TMEV persists at low levels. In the present study, we analyzed the copy number of TMEV genomes, plus- to minus-strand ratios, and full-length species in the spinal cords of infected mice and infected tissue culture cells by using Northern hybridization. Considering the low levels of infectious virus in the spinal cord, a surprisingly large number of viral genomes (mean of 3.0 x 10(9)) was detected in persistently infected mice. In the transition from the acute (approximately postinfection [p.i.] day 7) to the persistent (beginning on p.i. day 28) phase of infection, viral RNA copy numbers steadily increased, indicating that TMEV persistence involves active viral RNA replication. Further, BeAn viral genomes were full-length in size; i.e., no subgenomic species were detected and the ratio of BeAn virus plus- to minus-strand RNA indicated that viral RNA replication is unperturbed in the mouse spinal cord. Analysis of cultured macrophages and oligodendrocytes suggests that either of these cell types can potentially synthesize high numbers of viral RNA copies if infected in the spinal cord and therefore account for the heavy viral load. A scheme is presented for the direct isolation of both cell types directly from infected spinal cords for further viral analyses.  相似文献   

17.
Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis viruses (TMEV) are serologically related picornaviruses which cause both enteric and neurological disease in mice. The biological activities of TMEV vary between the two different TMEV subgroups (TO and GDVII) and with different passage histories of the same TMEV strain (e.g., mouse brain-passed versus tissue culture-passed DA strain of the TO subgroup). We raised neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against tissue culture-passed DA and GDVII strains of TMEV. We produced two mAbs against the DA strain which neutralized all members of the TO subgroup, but not the GDVII subgroup strains (GDVII and FA); these two DA mAbs reacted similarly with both mouse brain-passed DA and tissue culture-passed DA. Of six neutralizing GDVII mAbs, four reacted only to GDVII and FA, whereas two neutralized TO strains as well. These mAbs demonstrate the presence of TMEV group-specific as well as subgroup-specific neutralization and substantiate the division of TMEV into two distinct subgroups. On Western immunoblots one of the two DA mAbs reacted against isolated DA VP1, two GDVII mAbs (which were TMEV group specific) reacted against isolated GDVII VP1 and DA VP1, and the other DA mAb and four other GDVII mAbs required an intact virion conformation for reactivity. An analysis of the epitopes recognized by these mAbs may elucidate sites important in TMEV biological activities.  相似文献   

18.
The highly virulent GDVII strain of Theiler''s murine encephalomyelitis virus causes acute and fatal encephalomyelitis, whereas the DA strain causes mild encephalomyelitis followed by a chronic inflammatory demyelinating disease with virus persistence. The differences in the amino acid sequences of the leader protein (L) of the DA and GDVII strains are greater than those for any other viral protein. We examined the subcellular distribution of DA L and GDVII L tagged with the FLAG epitope in BHK-21 cells. Wild-type GDVII L was localized predominantly in the cytoplasm, whereas wild-type DA L showed a nucleocytoplasmic distribution. A series of the L mutant experiments demonstrated that the zinc finger domain, acidic domain, and C-terminal region of L were necessary for the nuclear accumulation of DA L. A GDVII L mutant with a deletion of the serine/threonine (S/T)-rich domain showed a nucleocytoplasmic distribution, in contrast to the predominant cytoplasmic distribution of wild-type GDVII L. A chimeric DA/GDVII L, D/G, which encodes the N region of DA L including the zinc finger domain and acidic domain, followed by the GDVII L sequence including the S/T-rich domain, was distributed exclusively throughout the cytoplasm but not in the nucleus, as observed with wild-type GDVII L. Another chimeric L, G/D (which is the converse of the D/G construct), accumulated in the nucleus as well as the cytoplasm, as was observed for wild-type DA L. The findings suggest that the differential distribution of DA L and GDVII L is determined primarily by the S/T-rich domain. The S/T-rich domain may be important for the viral activity through the regulation of the subcellular distribution of L.Theiler''s murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) belongs to the genus Cardiovirus of the family Picornaviridae, and its strains are divided into two subgroups on the basis of their different biological activities. The neurovirulent strains, such as GDVII and FA, produce acute and fatal encephalomyelitis in mice. The persistent strains, such as TO, DA, BeAn, etc., induce mild and nonfatal encephalomyelitis, followed by a chronic demyelinating disease with virus persistence in the spinal cords of mice. This late demyelinating disease is thought to be an excellent experimental model for the human demyelinating disease multiple sclerosis (MS) (5, 17, 20).The TMEV genome is a single-stranded RNA molecule and translated as a long precursor polyprotein to yield 12 viral proteins by autoproteolytic cleavage (23). Two subgroup strains of TMEV have a sequence identity of approximately 95% at the amino acid level. The amino acid sequences of the proteins encoded by the P1, P2, and P3 regions of both strains are highly conserved and show 94, 96, and 98% identity, respectively. The genome has another coding region, designated the leader (L), at the most amino-terminal location of the precursor polyprotein. The L coding region encodes 76 amino acids (aa) and shows a low sequence identity of only 85% to the above-described three regions (16, 19, 22). Therefore, L has the greatest difference in amino acid sequence among any of the viral proteins and may play an important role in subgroup-specific biological activities of TMEV. In this study, we have investigated the subcellular localization of the L proteins of GDVII and DA strains and characterized the functional domains involved in the differential distribution between DA L and GDVII L in BHK-21 cells by a series of deletion mutant and chimeric construct experiments.  相似文献   

19.
van Eyll O  Michiels T 《Journal of virology》2002,76(21):10665-10673
Theiler's virus is a neurotropic murine picornavirus which, depending on the strain, causes either acute encephalitis or persistent demyelinating disease. Persistent strains of Theiler's virus (such as DA) produce an 18-kDa protein called L* from an open reading frame overlapping that encoding the viral polyprotein. Neurovirulent strains (such as GDVII) are thought not to produce the L* protein, as the alternative open reading frame of these strains starts with an ACG codon instead of an AUG codon. However, we observed that both persistent and neurovirulent strain derivatives can produce two forms of the L* protein through unusual type II internal ribosome entry site-mediated translation. A full-length 18-kDa protein can be expressed from an ACG or an AUG initiation codon, whereas an N-terminally truncated 15-kDa product can be translated from a downstream AUG initiation codon. The expression of the 18-kDa form is required for efficient persistence of DA virus derivatives in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

20.
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