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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
L Zhang  A Senkowski  B Shim    R P Roos 《Journal of virology》1993,67(7):4404-4408
Strain GDVII and other members of the GDVII subgroup of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus are highly neurovirulent and rapidly fatal, while strain DA and other members of the TO subgroup produce a chronic, demyelinating disease. GDVII/DA chimeric cDNA studies suggest that a major neurovirulence determinant is within the GDVII 1B through 1D capsid protein coding region, although the additional presence of upstream GDVII sequences, including the 5' untranslated region, contributes to full neurovirulence. Our studies indicate that there are limitations in precisely delineating neurovirulence determinants with chimeric cDNAs between evolutionarily diverged viruses, such as GDVII and DA.  相似文献   

5.
Intratypic recombinant Theiler's viruses prepared between GDVII and DA strains were used to identify genomic sequences important in neurovirulence, virus persistence, and demyelination and to clarify the mechanisms involved in disease induction. The coding region between 1B and 2C of the highly virulent GDVII strain contains a determinant partly responsible for neurovirulence (early paralysis and death) which correlates with elevated levels of infectious virus and the presence of virus antigen within neurons of the brain stem and gray matter of the spinal cord. Both the GDVII and the DA strains of virus contain genetic determinants for late demyelination in spinal cord. However, quantitative analysis of demyelination produced by recombinant GDVII/DA viruses suggest that multiple gene segments influence the number and extent of demyelinating lesions.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Polyprotein processing of Theiler''s murine encephalomyelitis virus.   总被引:12,自引:10,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
R P Roos  W P Kong    B L Semler 《Journal of virology》1989,63(12):5344-5353
  相似文献   

8.
The strains of Theiler’s murine encephalomyelitis virus, a picornavirus, are divided into two groups according to their neurovirulence after intracerebral inoculation. The highly virulent GDVII strain causes an acute, fatal encephalomyelitis, whereas the DA strain causes a mild encephalomyelitis followed by a chronic inflammatory demyelinating disease associated with viral persistence. Studies with recombinant viruses showed that the capsid plays the major role in determining these phenotypes. However, the molecular basis for the effect of the capsid on neurovirulence is still unknown. In this paper, we describe a large difference in the patterns of infection of primary neuron cultures by the GDVII and DA strains. Close to 90% of the neurons were infected 12 h after inoculation with the GDVII strain, and the cytopathic effect was complete 24 h postinoculation. In contrast, with the DA strain, viral antigens were not detected in neurons until 24 h postinoculation. Infected neurons accounted for only 2% of the total number of neurons, even 6 days after inoculation. No cytopathic effect was visible, and the cultures could be kept for the same length of time as the noninfected controls. Because the neurovirulence of the GDVII strain has been mapped to the capsid, we examined the role of the capsid in this difference of phenotype. We showed, using recombinant viruses, that the capsid was indeed responsible for the pattern of infection observed in vitro, most likely through its role in viral entry. Thus, the levels of neurovirulence of the GDVII and DA strains correlate with their abilities to infect cultured neurons, and this ability is controlled by the capsid.  相似文献   

9.
Theiler's virus as a vector for foreign gene delivery.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
L Zhang  S Sato  J I Kim    R P Roos 《Journal of virology》1995,69(5):3171-3175
DA strain and other strains of the TO subgroup of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis viruses are members of the Cardiovirus genus of picornaviruses and produce a persistent demyelinating disease in mice. A recent study from our laboratory (W.-P. Kong, G. D. Ghadge, and R. P. Roos, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91:1796-1800, 1994) demonstrated that the leader, which is encoded at the N terminus of the Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus polyprotein, can be partially replaced by foreign sequences as well as completely deleted, with no loss of infectivity in BHK-21 cells. In this study, we have inserted up to 724 nucleotides into the leader coding region of an infectious DA clone. Recombinant viruses were produced, and the inserts were shown to be stable for at least three passages in BHK-21 cells.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The DA strain of Theiler's virus persists in the central nervous systems of mice and causes chronic inflammation and demyelination. The GDVII strain, on the other hand, causes an acute encephalitis that kills the host in a matter of days. We constructed a series of recombinants between two infectious cDNA clones of the genomes of DA and GDVII viruses. Analysis of the phenotypes of the recombinant viruses yielded the following results. (i) Determinants of persistence and demyelination are found only in the VP1 capsid protein of DA virus. (ii) Whereas the VP1 capsid protein of DA virus is able to fully attenuate the neurovirulence of GDVII virus and to allow the chimeric virus to persist and demyelinate, the VP1 capsid protein of GDVII virus is unable to render DA virus neurovirulent. (iii) The mere attenuation of the neurovirulence of GDVII virus does not allow it to persist and demyelinate.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
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   

14.
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   

15.
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   

16.
The DA strain of Theiler's virus persists in the central nervous system of mice and causes chronic inflammation and demyelination. On the other hand, the GDVII strain causes an acute encephalitis and does not persist in surviving animals. Series of recombinants between infectious cDNA clones of the genomes of DA and GDVII viruses have been constructed. The analysis of the phenotypes of the recombinant viruses has shown that determinants of persistence and demyelination are present in the capsid proteins of DA virus. Chimeric viruses constructed by the different research groups gave consistent results, with one exception. Chimeras GD1B-2A/DAFL3 and GD1B-2C/DAFL3, which contain part of capsid protein VP2, capsid proteins VP3 and VP1, and different portions of P2 of GDVII in a DA background, were able to persist and cause demyelination. Chimera R4, whose genetic map is identical to that of GD1B-2A/DAFL3, was not. After exchanging the viral chimeras between laboratories and verifying each other's observations, new chimeras were generated in order to explain this difference. Here we report that the discrepancy can be attributed to a single amino acid difference in the sequence of the capsid protein VP2 of the two parental DA strains. DAFL3 (University of Chicago) and the chimeras derived from it, GD1B-2A/DAFL3 and GD1B-2C/DAFL3, contain a Lys at position 141, while TMDA (Institut Pasteur) and R4, the chimera derived from it, contain an Asn in that position. This amino acid is located at the tip of the EF loop, on the rim of the depression spanning the twofold axis of the capsid. These results show that a single amino acid change can confer the ability to persist and demyelinate to a chimeric Theiler's virus, and they pinpoint a region of the viral capsid that is important for this phenotype.  相似文献   

17.
The DA strain of Theiler’s virus causes a persistent and demyelinating infection of the white matter of spinal cord, whereas the GDVII strain causes a fatal gray-matter encephalomyelitis. Studies with recombinant viruses showed that this difference in phenotype is controlled mainly by the capsid. However, conflicting results regarding the existence of determinants of persistence in the capsid of the GDVII strain have been published. Here we show that a GDVII virus whose neurovirulence has been attenuated by an insertion in the 5′ noncoding region does not persist in the central nervous systems of mice. Furthermore, this virus infects the gray matter efficiently, but not the white matter. These results confirm the absence of determinants of persistence in the GDVII capsid. They suggest that the DA capsid controls persistence by allowing the virus to infect cells in the white matter of the spinal cord.  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.
Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) is a natural pathogen of the mouse and belongs to the Picornaviridae family. TMEV strains are divided into two subgroups on the basis of their pathogenicity. The first group contains two neurovirulent strains, FA and GDVII, which cause a rapid fatal encephalitis. The second group includes persistent strains, like DA and BeAn, which produce a biphasic neurological disease in susceptible mice. Persistence of these viruses in the white matter of the spinal cord leads to chronic inflammatory demyelination. L929 cells, which are susceptible to TMEV infection, were subjected to physicochemical mutagenesis. Cellular clones that became resistant to TMEV infection were selected by viral infection. Three such mutants resistant to strain GDVII were characterized to determine the step of the virus cycle that was inhibited. The mutation present in one of these mutant cell lines inhibited, by more than 1,000-fold, the entry of strain GDVII but hardly decreased infection by strain DA. In the two other cellular mutants, replication of the viral genome was slowed down. Interestingly, one of these mutant cell lines resisted infection by both the persistent and neurovirulent strains while the second cell line resisted infection by strain GDVII but remained susceptible to the persistent virus. These results show that although they have 95% identity at the amino acid sequence level, neurovirulent and persistent viruses use partly distinct pathways for both entry into cells and genome replication.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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