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1.
The polyhedrin gene of the nuclear polyhedrosis virus of the gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar) (LdMNPV) was cloned and sequenced. A polyhedrin open reading frame of 735 nucleotides (nt) was identified which can code for a protein of 245 amino acids that demonstrates a high degree of similarity to other polyhedrins. The protein predicted from the nucleotide sequence shows differences in several regions to that previously sequenced from the LdMNPV polyhedrin protein. The consensus sequence AATAAGTATTTT found at the mRNA start site of baculovirus hyperexpressed genes was located 55 nt upstream from the translational start site.  相似文献   

2.
Hybridoma cell lines secreting monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) specific to a 31,000 molecular weight viral protein or a 31,000 molecular weight polyhedrin protein of Lymantria dispar nuclear polyhedrosis virus (LdNPV) were developed. The two polypeptides were shown to be different by comparing their amino acid compositions. Immuno-electron microscopy was used to verify specific binding of the MAbs to their respective targets. Specific MAbs were used to develop an ELISA procedure to monitor the development of LdNPV virus and polyhedrin in vivo. Results indicated that in hemolymph of larvae fed 10(6) polyhedral inclusion bodies, the concentration of virus began to increase 16 h after inoculation and continued to increase for the next 5 days. By 36 h, the concentration of polyhedrin increased and was maintained at a high level in the later stages of infection. One-third of this group of infected larvae survived the infection. In these individuals, the concentrations of virus and polyhedrin declined to a low level 5 days after infection. This suggests the presence of a host mechanism for clearing the virus from the hemolymph.  相似文献   

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Polyhedral inclusion body protein (PIBP), harvested from the nuclear polyhedrosis virus (NPV) infecting the gypsy moth, Porthetria dispar, illicits the hemagglutination of chicken erythrocytes. Antisera to PIBP, polyhedral inclusion bodies (PIB), and virions (RODS) from the NPV's infecting P. dispar and the European Pine Sawfly, Neodiprion sertifer, inhibits hemagglutination when utilized to neutralize the PIBP from P. dispar. The crossreactivity of antisera to viral components from N. sertifer, a hymenopteran insect, with viral antigens from P. dispar, a lepidopteran insect, demonstrates a serological relationship exists between two viruses which have widely separated host ranges.  相似文献   

7.
K Majima  R Kobara    S Maeda 《Journal of virology》1993,67(12):7513-7521
Homologous regions (hrs) (hr1,hr2-left,hr2-right,hr3,hr4-left,hr 4-right, and hr5) similar to those found in the Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (AcNPV) genome were found in the Bombyx mori NPV (BmNPV) genome. The BmNPV hrs contained two to eight repeats of a homologous nucleotide sequence which were on average about 75 bp long. All of these homologous sequence repeats contained a 26-bp-long palindrome motif with an EcoRI or EcoRI-like site at its core. The consensus sequence of the BmNPV hrs showed 95% conservation with respect to those found in AcNPV. Nucleotide sequence analysis indicated that hr2-left and hr2-right of BmNPV evolved from an ancestor similar to hr2 of AcNPV by inversion, cleavage, and ligation. The polarities of the BmNPV and AcNPV hrs were conserved except for that of hr4-left. Within hr4-right of BmNPV, four repeats of a previously underscribed palindrome motif were found. Bmhr5D, a BmNPV mutant which lacked hr5, replicated at a rate similar to that of wild-type BmNPV in BmN cells and silkworm larvae, indicating that hr5 was not essential for viral replication. After ten passages of Bmhr5D in BmN cells, no detectable changes in its genome were observed by restriction endonuclease analysis. The evolution and divergence of the BmNPV genome are also discussed.  相似文献   

8.
A bimodal temporal pattern of mortality caused by the nuclear polyhedrosis virus (NPV) was observed in nine gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar) populations of varying densities. In all cases, peak mortality from NPV occurred during the second wave (late larval instars) and the highest mortality occurred in high density populations. Patterns of NPV mortality were established several weeks before being expressed. There was no discernible correlation between weekly mortality rates and temperature, rainfall, or total solar radiation. The bimodality was also apparent in NPV contamination on foliage which was measured by bioassay. A similar pattern was observed in the laboratory among larvae reared in groups from field-collected egg masses and from eggs artificially contaminated with NPV from a laboratory population. As in field populations, the period of low mortality from NPV between the two waves occurred when most larvae were late third and fourth instars. Larvae reared individually did not exhibit the second wave of mortality.  相似文献   

9.
The gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar L.) nuclear polyhedrosis virus was genetically engineered for nonpersistence by removal of the gene coding for polyhedrin production and stabilized using a coocclusion process. A beta-galactosidase marker gene was inserted into the genetically engineered virus (LdGEV) so that infected larvae could be tested for its presence using a colorimetric assay. In 1993, LdGEV-infected gypsy moths were released in a forested plot in Massachusetts to test for spread and persistence. A similar forested plot 2 km away served as a control. For 3 years (1993-1995), gypsy moths were established in the two plots in Massachusetts to serve as test and control populations. Each week, larvae were collected from both plots. These field-collected larvae were reared individually, checked for mortality, and then tested for the presence of beta-galactosidase. Other gypsy moth larvae were confined on LdGEV-contaminated foliage for 1 week and then treated as the field-collected larvae. The LdGEV was sought in bark, litter, and soil samples collected from each plot. To verify the presence of the LdGEV, polymerase chain reaction, slot blot DNA hybridization, and restriction enzyme analysis were also used on larval samples. Field-collected larvae infected with the engineered virus were recovered in the release plot in 1993, but not in subsequent years; no field-collected larvae from the control plot contained the engineered virus. Larvae confined on LdGEV-contaminated foliage were killed by the virus. No LdGEV was recovered from bark, litter, or soil samples from either of the plots.  相似文献   

10.
G Dller  A Grner    O C Straub 《Applied microbiology》1983,45(4):1229-1233
To evaluate the hygienic risk involved in using baculoviruses for insect pest control, safety studies are required. Pigs were chosen as representative test animals of commercial and agricultural importance. The tests were aimed at detecting virus propagation, immune reactions, and signs of acute infection (changes in body temperature and hematology profile, swelling of lymph nodes). Four of five animals inoculated with nuclear polyhedrosis virus showed a slight temperature rise at day 2 postinfection. After day 4 postinfection, no differences between infected animals and controls were observed. In the bioassay, virus activity could be recovered from fecal samples; however, no activity was found in organ extracts. The data did not indicate hygienic risks involved in the application of nuclear polyhedrosis virus, especially that from Mamestra brassicae, in biological pest control.  相似文献   

11.
Radiolabeled Lymantria dispar nuclear polyhedrosis virus DNA probes were used in a DNA hybridization assay to detect the presence of viral DNA in extracts from infected larvae. Total DNA was extracted from larvae, bound to nitrocellulose filters, and assayed for the presence of viral DNA by two methods: slot-blot vacuum filtration and whole-larval squashes. To test the assays, neonate larvae were fed droplets containing a known concentration of L. dispar nuclear polyhedrosis virus and observed for up to 10 days to determine the percentage of infected larvae. The average percent mortalities were 88.0, 60.7, 26.0, and 5.3% for larvae fed droplets containing 4.0 x 10(4), 1.0 x 10(4), 2.5 x 10(3), and 6.25 x 10(2) polyhedral inclusion bodies (PIBs) per ml, respectively. Other larvae treated with the same virus concentrations were frozen at 2, 4, and 6 days postinoculation and examined by the hybridization techniques. The average percentage of slot blots containing viral DNA equaled 81.0, 58.0, 18.0, and 6.0% for larvae blotted 4 days after treatment with 4.0 x 10(4), 1.0 x 10(4), 2.5 x 10(3), and 6.25 x 10(2) PIBs per ml, respectively, and 89.9, 52.1, 26.6, and 6.0%, respectively at 6 days postinoculation. Thus, the hybridization results were closely correlated with mortality observed in reared larvae. Hybridization of squashes of larvae frozen 4 days after receiving the above virus treatments also produced accurate measures of the incidence of virus infection.  相似文献   

12.
Radiolabeled Lymantria dispar nuclear polyhedrosis virus DNA probes were used in a DNA hybridization assay to detect the presence of viral DNA in extracts from infected larvae. Total DNA was extracted from larvae, bound to nitrocellulose filters, and assayed for the presence of viral DNA by two methods: slot-blot vacuum filtration and whole-larval squashes. To test the assays, neonate larvae were fed droplets containing a known concentration of L. dispar nuclear polyhedrosis virus and observed for up to 10 days to determine the percentage of infected larvae. The average percent mortalities were 88.0, 60.7, 26.0, and 5.3% for larvae fed droplets containing 4.0 x 10(4), 1.0 x 10(4), 2.5 x 10(3), and 6.25 x 10(2) polyhedral inclusion bodies (PIBs) per ml, respectively. Other larvae treated with the same virus concentrations were frozen at 2, 4, and 6 days postinoculation and examined by the hybridization techniques. The average percentage of slot blots containing viral DNA equaled 81.0, 58.0, 18.0, and 6.0% for larvae blotted 4 days after treatment with 4.0 x 10(4), 1.0 x 10(4), 2.5 x 10(3), and 6.25 x 10(2) PIBs per ml, respectively, and 89.9, 52.1, 26.6, and 6.0%, respectively at 6 days postinoculation. Thus, the hybridization results were closely correlated with mortality observed in reared larvae. Hybridization of squashes of larvae frozen 4 days after receiving the above virus treatments also produced accurate measures of the incidence of virus infection.  相似文献   

13.
Habib S  Hasnain SE 《Journal of virology》2000,74(11):5182-5189
The identification of potential baculovirus origins of replication (ori) has involved the generation and characterization of defective interfering particles that contain major genomic deletions yet retain their capability to replicate by testing the replication ability of transiently transfected plasmids carrying viral sequences in infected cells. So far, there has not been any evidence to demonstrate the actual utilization of these putative origins in Autographa californica multinucleocapsid nuclear polyhedrosis virus (AcMNPV) replication. By using the method of origin mapping by competitive PCR, we have obtained quantitative data for the ori activity of the HindIII-K region and the ie-1 promoter sequence in AcMNPV. We also provide evidence for differential activity of the two ori in the context of the viral genome through the replication phase of viral infection. Comparison of the number of molecules representing the HindIII-K and ie-1 origins vis-à-vis the non-ori polH region in a size-selected nascent DNA preparation revealed that the HindIII-K ori is utilized approximately 14 times more efficiently than the ie-1 region during the late phase of infection. HindIII-K also remains the more active ori through the early and middle replication phases. Our results provide in vivo evidence in support of the view that AcMNPV replication involves multiple ori that are activated with vastly different efficiencies during the viral infection cycle.  相似文献   

14.
To evaluate the hygienic risk involved in using baculoviruses for insect pest control, safety studies are required. Pigs were chosen as representative test animals of commercial and agricultural importance. The tests were aimed at detecting virus propagation, immune reactions, and signs of acute infection (changes in body temperature and hematology profile, swelling of lymph nodes). Four of five animals inoculated with nuclear polyhedrosis virus showed a slight temperature rise at day 2 postinfection. After day 4 postinfection, no differences between infected animals and controls were observed. In the bioassay, virus activity could be recovered from fecal samples; however, no activity was found in organ extracts. The data did not indicate hygienic risks involved in the application of nuclear polyhedrosis virus, especially that from Mamestra brassicae, in biological pest control.  相似文献   

15.
A comparative study of Spodoptera nuclear polyhedrosis virus (NPV) and Autographa NPV replication in Spodoptera exigua revealed some cytopathologic differences. Infection with Spodoptera NPV was accompanied by electron-dense intranuclear granules. Autographa infection within the midgut led to secretion within the lumens of the goblet cells of paracrystalline arrays of small, round particles, 9.5 nm in diameter. Autographa virus was also observed in various stages of possible replication within the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

16.
Second instar gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar (L.) (Lepidoptera: Lymantriidae), larvae suffered significantly greater mortality from aerially applied gypsy moth nuclear polyhedrosis virus (Gypchek) when the virus was consumed on quaking aspen, Populus tremuloides Michx., versus red oak, Quercus spp. L., foliage. Laboratory assays in which various doses of Gypchek and salicin (a phenolic glycoside present in aspen foliage) were tested in combination demonstrated that salicin significantly increased total larval mortality and lowered the LD50 estimates (dose of Gypchek that resulted in 50% population mortality) for the virus, although not significantly. While salicin did not impact larval survival in the absence of Gypcek, it did act to significantly deter feeding when it was present in high concentrations (up to 5.0%) within the treatment formulations. The enhanced activity of Gypchek in the presence of salicin is similar to prior reports of enhanced activity of the bacterial pathogen Bacillus thuringiensis when consumed concurrently with phenolic glycosides commonly present in aspen foliage. The enhancement of viral activity is in contrast to the inhibitory effects on the virus reported for another common group of phenolic compounds, tannins.  相似文献   

17.
Comparative studies were performed on the replication of the Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus in cell lines from Estigmene acrea, BTI-EAA; Lymantria dispar, IPLB-LD64BA; Mamestra brassicae, IZD-MB0503; Spodoptera frugiperda, IPLB-SF1254; and Trichoplusia ni, TN-368. Significant differences were observed in the amount of virus obtained from the cell lines, with M. brassicae and T. ni producing more polyhedra than the other lines. These two cell lines also produced nonoccluded virus most rapidly, followed by S. frugiperda, E. acrea, and L. dispar. Sensitivities of the cell lines to infection by the virus, as determined by plaque formation, followed the same pattern, with M. brassicae being most sensitive and L. dispar least so. The T. ni cell line produced polyhedra which were more pathogenic to T. ni larvae than those from the other cells. These differences have important implications in the application of cell cultures in the development of microbial insecticides.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract:  Three specific DNA probes were used for the detection of the nuclear polyhedrosis (NPV) virus of Lymantria dispar ( Ld NPV) genome. Two of these probes, H2 and H3 were obtained by classical cloning method and one (TR6) by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). These probes, used individually or in a pool in the standard slot–blot hybridizations, were able to detect 109 genome copies. By performing 35 cycles of PCR amplification before hybridization with primers specific to Ld NPV genome on DNA extracted from infected larvae, the sensitivity of the hybridization technique was increased, so that as little as 10 copies of the Ld NPV genome could be detected. Using these methods, L. dispar naturally infected by Ld NPV were identified among field populations in Canada and in the United States near the eastern Canadian border. Using a combination of PCR and hybridization, Ld NPV contamination of egg masses were also detected. By disinfecting the eggs with sodium hypochlorite prior to PCR amplification and hybridization, it was also demonstrated that transmission of viral infection in the natural populations is mainly caused by external contamination of the egg and is unlikely to occur through the transovarial route.  相似文献   

19.
DNA preparations were obtained after dissolving the inclusion bodies, polyhedra virus particles, from the purified bundle virus of Porthetria dispar L. nuclear polyhedrosis. The DNA molecules in the preparations obtained are of different conformation and separate within the CsCl density gradient in the presence of ethidium bromide into supercoiled catenated and relaxed circular molecules (with the admixture of linear molecules). The circular DNA was studied by electron microscopy. The size of virus genome according to the data of reassociation kinetics of DNA is about 100 MD. Estimated on the basis of the values of buoyant density (p) and the melting temperature (Tmelt.) the content of guanine-cytosine pairs (GC pairs) in the viral DNA varies from 61 up to 65 mol%, and in the insect cell DNA--from 38 up to 40 mol%. The viral and cellular DNA are distinctly separated by centrifugation within the CsCl density gradient.  相似文献   

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