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1.
One of the best-studied examples of host-virus coevolution is the release of myxoma virus (MV) for biological control of European rabbits in Australia and Europe. To investigate the genetic basis of MV adaptation to its new host, we sequenced the genome of 6918, an attenuated Spanish field strain, and compared it with that of Lausanne, the strain originally released in Europe in 1952. Although isolated 43 years apart, the genomes were highly conserved (99.95% identical). Only 32 of the 159 MV predicted proteins revealed amino acid changes. Four genes (M009L, M036L, M135R, and M148R) in 6918 were disrupted by frameshift mutations.Myxoma virus (MV), the causative agent of myxomatosis, belongs to the Leporipoxvirus genus of the Poxviridae family (9). Two distinct types of MV have been identified: South American MV, which circulates in Sylvilagus brasiliensis, and Californian MV, which circulates in Sylvilagus bachmani. Each virus is highly adapted to its host, causing a benign cutaneous fibroma at the site of inoculation. Both types of MV infect the European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus), causing myxomatosis. The Californian strain MSW is more virulent for European rabbits than South American strains such as SLS or Lausanne (54). Another leporipoxvirus, Shope fibroma virus (SFV), is found in eastern North America in Sylvilagus floridanus. SFV protects European rabbits against myxomatosis (24), and it is routinely used as a vaccine.One of the best-studied examples of host-virus coevolution is the use of MV for biological control of European rabbits (22, 23, 29). It is particularly unusual because the precise time the virus was released is known, and the original viruses are available for comparison with current strains. MV (the SLS strain) was deliberately released in Australia in 1950 and soon after (1952) in France (the Lausanne strain), whence it rapidly spread across Europe, and it has become endemic since then. For almost 60 years, a complex coevolution of host and virus has occurred, characterized by the emergence of attenuated viral strains and rabbits selected for resistance to MV (11, 12, 30).The MV Lausanne strain and SFV have been completely sequenced (13, 61). MV encodes 171 genes, versus 165 encoded by SFV. The genetic information is highly conserved between the two viruses. Recently, preliminary sequencing of the MSW strain indicated that the major genomic differences with the Lausanne strain localize at the left terminal end of the MSW genome (31). In MSW, the terminal inverted repeats (TIRs) are extended, causing the duplication of five complete open reading frames (ORFs), which are present as a single copy near the right TIR in the Lausanne strain (9). To date, little molecular analysis concerning the adaptation of MV to its new host has been performed. Studies involving Australian field strains found small differences with reference to the SLS and Lausanne strains (49, 50), suggesting that adaptation (and the concomitant attenuation) of MV is not associated with major genetic changes such as large deletions. This finding is in contrast to what has been reported for attenuated poxviruses obtained by extensive cell culture passaging, which usually present substantial genomic deletions or rearrangements (5, 25, 36, 47, 48).Strain 6918 is a naturally attenuated MV isolated in Spain in 1995 (7). It is therefore a descendant of the Lausanne strain recovered after 43 years of continuous evolution in the field. It has been used for the development of a “transmissible vaccine” intended to protect wild-rabbit populations against both myxomatosis and rabbit hemorrhagic disease virus (RHDV) in Spain, where the European rabbit plays a key role in the Mediterranean ecosystems (18). For this purpose, a recombinant virus, 6918VP60-T2, was constructed by inserting the capsid gene of RHDV into the genome of strain 6918 (4, 6, 7, 56, 57). The genomes of 6918 and 6918VP60-T2 have been sequenced. Here we report the results of our comparison of the genomic sequences of Lausanne and 6918. To our knowledge, this is the first comparative genomic analysis involving two poxvirus field strains linked by a clearly recorded lineage, one being fully virulent and the other virtually nonpathogenic. The results provide relevant insights into the mechanisms of MV attenuation that occurred as a consequence of the adaptation of the virus to its new host.  相似文献   

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非洲猪瘟(African swine fever,ASF)是由非洲猪瘟病毒(African swine fever virus,ASFV)引起猪的一种急性、高度致死性传染病.该病在全世界多个地方流行,导致该病流行的原因之一是缺乏有效的预防及治疗药物、疫苗等.尽管ASFV基因总的突变率相对其基因组来说较低,但是,与其它病毒相比,其基因突变总数则相当巨大.研究发现ASFV的多个基因具有高突变率的特性,表现为基因多样性,此外,由于该病毒为核质大DNA病毒,编码大量蛋白,其抗原也表现为多样性.本文总结了 ASFV基因多样性和抗原多样性,分析其发生原理并综述了最新研究成果,以期为研究ASFV病毒遗传演化、开发疫苗及指导疫情防控提供思路.  相似文献   

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Infectious laryngotracheitis (ILT) is an acute respiratory disease caused by infectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV). The complete genome sequences of five attenuated ILTV vaccine strains and six virulent ILTV strains as well as two Australian ILTV field strains have been published in Australia and the USA so far. To provide the complete genome sequence information of ILTVs from different geographic regions, the whole genome of ILTV LJS09 isolated in China was sequenced. The genome of ILTV LJS09 was 153,201 bp in length, and contained 79 ORFs. Most of the ORFs had high sequence identity with homologous ORFs of reference strains. There was a large fragment deletion within the noncoding region of unique long region (UL) of ILTV LJS09 compared with SA2 and A20 strains. Though the origin binding protein of ILTV LJS09 existed, there was no AT-rich region in strain LJS09. Alignments of the amino acid sequences revealed seven mutations at amino acids 71 (Arg → Lys), 116 (Ala → Val), 207 (Thr → Ile) and 644 (Thr → Ile) on glycoprotein B, 155 (Phe → Ser) and 376 (Arg → His) on glycoprotein D and 8 (Gln→Pro) on glycoprotein L of ILTV LJS09 compared to those of virulent strain (USDA) as ILTV LJS09 did not grow on chicken embryo fibroblasts, suggesting the role of the key seven amino acids in determination of the cell tropism of ILTV LJS09. This is the first complete genome sequence of the virulent strain of ILTV in Asia using the conventional PCR method, which will help to facilitate the future molecular biological research of ILTVs.  相似文献   

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猪瘟病毒强毒株和兔化弱毒疫苗株E2糖蛋白分别含有5个和6个潜在的糖基化位点,其中986N是兔化弱毒疫苗株所特有的。为了分析二者糖基化位点差异及其影响,将去掉信号肽和跨膜区的猪瘟病毒石门强毒株(Shi-men)和兔化弱毒疫苗株(HCLV)E2基因置于蜂素信号肽序列下游,使其在Sf9细胞内表达重组Shimen-E2和HCLV-E2蛋白。结果显示,重组E2蛋白以二聚体的形式分泌表达于细胞培养液中,但二者分子量存在差异。用endo H和PNGase F对纯化后的重组E2蛋白进行去糖基化处理后,二者分子量大小变成一致,证实石门强毒株和兔化弱毒株E2蛋白分子量大小的差异可能是由于糖基化程度的差异所致。对986N糖基化位点进行定点突变后发现,突变后的Shimen-E2与野生型HCLV-E2分子量大小一致,而突变后的HCLV-E2与野生型Shimen-E2分子量大小一致,表明Shimen-E2和HCLV-E2分子量大小的差异的确是由于986N糖基化位点的差异引起的。  相似文献   

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Ten commercially available disinfectants were tested at high pH in 2% sodium hydroxide and low pH in 2% acetic acid as inactivants for African swine fever (ASF) in a protein-rich blood-spleen homogenate. As assayed in leukocyte cultures, sodium hydroxide and acetic acid, sodium meta silicate and Roccal did not inactivate ASF virus in 1 hr at 22 to 25 C. Some viricidal activity as assayed in leukocyte cultures was found with Weladol, Triton X-100 Amphyl, pHisoHex, sodium dodecyl sulfate, LpH, Environ, Environ D, and One-Stroke Environ. Of these, the last four appeared to be most promising. When assayed in pigs, only One-Stroke Environ (1/E) was viricidal. Concentrations of 1.0, 0.75, and 0.5 were effective, but, at 0.25%, virus was not inactivated. The minimal time to inactivate ASF virus by 1% 1/E is 60 min. A room contaminated with ASF virus was made safe for pigs after 1 hr by spraying with 1% 1/E. The most active component of 1/E is o-phenylphenol. Although another component of 1/E, i.e., o-benzyl-p-chlorophenol, also has some activity, the mixture of the active components of 1/E is most effective against ASF virus. One of the soluble antigens associated with ASF virus is destroyed by 1/E.  相似文献   

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African swine fever (ASF) virus is a large DNA virus that shares the striking icosahedral symmetry of iridoviruses and the genomic organization of poxviruses. Both groups of viruses have a complex envelope structure. In this study, the mechanism of formation of the inner envelope of ASF virus was investigated. Examination of thin cryosections by electron microscopy showed two internal membranes in mature intracellular virions and all structural intermediates. These membranes were in continuity with intracellular membrane compartments, suggesting that the virus gained two membranes from intracellular membrane cisternae. Immunogold electron microscopy showed the viral structural protein p17 and resident membrane proteins of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) within virus assembly sites, virus assembly intermediates, and mature virions. Resident ER proteins were also detected by Western blotting of isolated virions. The data suggested the ASF virus was wrapped by the ER. Analysis of the published sequence of ASF virus (R. J. Yanez et al., Virology 208:249–278, 1995) revealed a reading frame, XP124L, that encoded a protein predicted to translocate into the lumen of the ER. Pulse-chase immunoprecipitation and glycosylation analysis of pXP124L, the product of the XP124L gene, showed that pXP124L was retained in the ER lumen after synthesis. When analyzed by immunogold electron microscopy, pXP124L localized to virus assembly intermediates and fully assembled virions. Western blot analysis detected pXP124L in virions isolated from Percoll gradients. The packaging of pXP124L from the lumen of the ER into the virion is consistent with ASF virus being wrapped by ER cisternae: a mechanism which explains the presence of two membranes in the viral envelope.African swine fever (ASF) virus is a large icosahedral enveloped DNA virus that causes a lethal hemorrhagic disease in domestic pigs. The virus is endemic in areas of southern Europe and in Africa where it causes major problems for the development of pig industries. At present there are no vaccines, and the disease is controlled through the slaughter of infected animals. The economic importance of ASF virus has made the virus the focus of much research since it was first described in 1921 (32). ASF virus is unique among animal viruses, and its classification has been controversial. ASF virus shares the striking icosahedral symmetry of iridoviruses (5, 8, 13, 34), while the presence of inverted terminal repeats and covalently linked ends in the 170-kDa genome suggests similarities with poxviruses (16). The ASF virus genome encoding at least 150 proteins has been sequenced (17, 51), and the amino acid sequences of at least 11 structural proteins are known. p73 is the major structural protein (14, 28) and has sequence similarities to the capsid protein of iridoviruses (39). The ordered proteolysis of pp220 produces p150, p37/p34 and p14 (40), which together comprise 25% of the viral proteins (3). These proteins localize to the interior of the virion (3). Three proteins, J13L/p54, I1L/p17, and p22, with membrane-spanning domains localize to the viral envelope (10, 37, 41, 43). Three other structural proteins, p14.5 encoded by E120R (30), p10 encoded by K78R (35), and p5AR encoded by A104R (7), have DNA-binding properties (51) and may be involved in DNA packaging. The virus has been the subject of several detailed electron microscopy studies (24, 8, 9, 11, 13, 34, 47). Electron micrographs of sections taken through ASF virus assembly sites reveal fully assembled virions as 200-nm hexagons and an ordered series of assembly intermediates with one to six sides of a hexagon. Close inspection of intracellular virions identifies multiple concentric layers of differing electron densities. According to recent models, the layers represent a central electron-dense nucleocapsid core, surrounded by an inner core shell, an inner envelope, and an outer capsid layer (3). The mechanism of formation of the inner envelope of ASF virus has not been resolved.Most viruses gain a single membrane envelope by budding into intracellular membrane compartments or from the plasma membrane, as reviewed in reference 21. When viruses bud into an intracellular compartment, the domains of the membrane proteins that are initially located in the lumen of membrane compartments are exposed on the outside of the virion after release from the cell (Fig. (Fig.1a).1a). A second mechanism of envelopment, described recently for poxviruses and herpesviruses (18, 20, 24, 38, 42, 46, 50), is more complex and involves the wrapping of virions by membrane cisternae derived from specific membrane compartments. Wrapping provides two membrane envelopes in one step and leaves the virion free in the cytoplasm. When compared with budding, wrapping reverses the orientation of membrane proteins within the virus such that the domains of membrane proteins located in the lumen of the wrapping organelle are confined to the interior of the virus after release from the cell, whereas cytoplasmic tails are exposed on the outside of the virus (Fig. (Fig.1b).1b). Given these important consequences for understanding the mechanism of assembly of the virus and for determining the final orientation of membrane proteins in virions, we have set out to determine whether ASF virus acquires its membranes by the conventional budding mechanism or whether the virus is wrapped by intracellular membrane compartments before release from the cell. Open in a separate windowFIG. 1Schematic comparison of budding and wrapping mechanisms of virus envelopment. (a) Budding. Viral nucleoprotein complexes bind to the cytoplasmic domains of virally encoded integral membrane proteins (|, membrane glycoproteins). Interactions between viral proteins lead to membrane curvature, and the virion gains a single membrane by budding into the lumen of the membrane compartment. When the virion is released from the cell, oligosaccharides () are exposed on the surface of the virus, and the cytoplasmic tail of the membrane glycoprotein is buried within the virion. (b) Wrapping. Viral nucleoprotein complexes bind to the cytoplasmic domains of virally encoded integral membrane proteins. The nucleoprotein complex is then wrapped by the membrane cisternae, and the virus gains two membranes. The particle remains in the cytosol. When the virion is released from the cell by cell lysis, oligosaccharides () are buried within the two membranes of the virion while the cytoplasmic tail of the membrane glycoprotein is exposed on the surface of the virus.In this study we have taken advantage of thin cryoelectron microscopic sections to enhance the definition of viral membranes. The micrographs show two membranes within mature intracellular virions and all structural intermediates. They also show assembly intermediates in continuity with cellular membrane compartments. Consistent with our earlier study showing that p73 was enveloped by the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (15), immunogold labelling experiments show resident proteins of the ER within membranes found at assembly sites, in virus assembly intermediates, and in mature virions. Importantly, we have identified a protein (pXP124L) encoded by ASF virus that translocates completely into the lumen of the ER and is incorporated as a structural protein of the virus. The presence of two membranes within intracellular virions and structural intermediates and the packaging of a structural protein from the lumen of the ER into the virus, strongly suggest that ASF virus is wrapped by the ER.  相似文献   

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African swine fever virus (ASFV) is a large DNA virus that enters host cells after receptor-mediated endocytosis and depends on acidic cellular compartments for productive infection. The exact cellular mechanism, however, is largely unknown. In order to dissect ASFV entry, we have analyzed the major endocytic routes using specific inhibitors and dominant negative mutants and analyzed the consequences for ASFV entry into host cells. Our results indicate that ASFV entry into host cells takes place by clathrin-mediated endocytosis which requires dynamin GTPase activity. Also, the clathrin-coated pit component Eps15 was identified as a relevant cellular factor during infection. The presence of cholesterol in cellular membranes, but not lipid rafts or caveolae, was found to be essential for a productive ASFV infection. In contrast, inhibitors of the Na+/H+ ion channels and actin polymerization inhibition did not significantly modify ASFV infection, suggesting that macropinocytosis does not represent the main entry route for ASFV. These results suggest a dynamin-dependent and clathrin-mediated endocytic pathway of ASFV entry for the cell types and viral strains analyzed.Many animal viruses have evolved to exploit endocytosis to gain entry into host cells after initial attachment of virions to specific cell surface receptors. To date, a number of different routes of endocytosis used by viruses have been characterized, including clathrin-mediated endocytosis, uptake via caveolae/lipid rafts, macropinocytosis, phagocytosis, and other routes that are currently poorly understood.In recent years, viruses have also been used as tools to study cellular endocytosis and membrane trafficking at the molecular level, with there being special interest in the regulation of the diverse routes (31), since examples of viruses using each route can be found (reviewed in references 26, 31, and 38). The clathrin-mediated endocytic route has been the most extensively studied at the molecular level, and it has been shown to be used by diverse mammalian enveloped viruses, such as vesicular stomatitis virus (42), Semliki Forest virus (19), and West Nile virus (11), to infect cells. Influenza virus and HIV-1 also can use this pathway as an alternative route of entry (12, 39). Clathrin is assembled on the inside face of the plasma membrane to form a characteristic coated pit (CCP). During this process, clathrin also interacts with a number of essential molecules, including Eps15, adapter protein AP2, and dynamin GTPase (9). Additionally, clathrin-mediated endocytosis also provides endocytic vesicles as an acidified environment for those viruses that require a low-pH step during the first stages of infection to initiate capsid destabilization and genome uncoating. On the other hand, the lipid raft/caveola-based route is generally used by those acid-independent viruses. Recently, macropinocytosis is generating growing interest, since it has been demonstrated to be induced by some viruses from diverse families, such as vaccinia virus and adenovirus serotype 3 (5, 29), to gain entry into cells.In this study, we have focused on the entry of African swine fever virus (ASFV), a large enveloped DNA virus with a genomic composition similar to that of poxviruses, although the virion structure and morphology resemble those of iridoviruses. At present, it is the sole member of the newly created family Asfarviridae (16, 43). It is the etiologic agent responsible for a highly lethal and hemorrhagic disease affecting domestic swine, which often results in important economic losses in affected countries because of the high rate of mortality associated with this illness and the lack of an effective vaccine.Early studies of the entry of BA71V, a Vero cell-adapted ASFV strain, into host cells showed that this internalization of virus particles is a temperature-, energy-, and low-pH-dependent process, since it does not occur at 4°C or in the presence of inhibitors of cellular respiration or lysosomotropic agents (2, 44). All these features are consistent with a receptor-mediated endocytosis mechanism of entry. However, there are still numerous questions to be answered. One of them is the nature of the cellular receptor(s) that mediates ASFV entry, which remains largely unknown, although a correlation between cell susceptibility to infection and expression of porcine CD163 on the surface of swine monocytes/macrophages has been reported (36). In regard to the viral components involved in this initial step, the p12 and p54 proteins were shown to play a role during attachment to the cell surface and p30 during internalization, as inferred from previous studies with neutralizing antibodies against p30 and p54 (17) and blockage of infection after saturation of virus binding sites with recombinant p12 (6). Early electron microscopy (EM) studies (2, 45) revealed that attachment of ASFV virions to the cell surface often occurs in coated pits; however, their later presence inside coated vesicles is not fully clear. After attachment, virions are detected inside endosomes, where fusion with the viral membrane takes place. The ASFV cycle continues with the transport of viral cores via retrograde transport along microtubules to reach a perinuclear area, known as the viral factory, where replication occurs (4).In recent times, knowledge about different endocytic pathways and their regulatory molecules has notably increased, and the development of molecular tools to study these processes is becoming increasingly precise (38). In the present study, we examined the ASFV infection using a variety of chemical inhibitors and dominant negative molecules to disrupt different endocytic pathways. Our results confirmed a major role for dynamin-dependent and clathrin-mediated endocytosis during the first stages of ASFV infection, with no significant differences in the behavior of the two ASFV strains and the two cell lines analyzed.  相似文献   

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The pathogenesis of African swine fever virus (ASFV) infection in Ornithodoros porcinus porcinus was examined in nymphal ticks infected with the ASFV isolate Chiredzi/83/1. At times postinfection (p.i.) ranging from 6 h to 290 days, ticks or dissected tick tissues were titrated for virus and examined ultrastructurally for evidence of virus replication. The ASFV infection rate in ticks was 100% in these experiments, and virus infection was not associated with a significant increase in tick mortality. Initial ASFV replication occurred in phagocytic digestive cells of the midgut epithelium. Subsequent infection and replication of ASFV in undifferentiated midgut cells was observed at 15 days p.i. Generalization of virus infection from midgut to other tick tissues required 2 to 3 weeks and most likely involved virus movement across the basal lamina of the midgut into the hemocoel. Secondary sites of virus replication included hemocytes (type I and II), connective tissue, coxal gland, salivary gland, and reproductive tissue. Virus replication was not observed in the nervous tissue of the synganglion, Malpighian tubules, and muscle. Persistent infection, characterized by active virus replication, was observed for all involved tick tissues. After 91 days p.i., viral titers in salivary gland and reproductive tissue were consistently the highest detected. Successful tick-to-pig transmission of ASFV at 48 days p.i. correlated with high viral titers in salivary and coxal gland tissue and their secretions. A similar pattern of virus infection and persistence in O. porcinus porcinus was observed for three additional ASFV tick isolates in their associated ticks.African swine fever (ASF) is a highly lethal disease of domestic pigs for which animal slaughter and area quarantine are the only methods of disease control. African swine fever virus (ASFV), the causative agent of ASF, is a large double-stranded DNA virus which is the only member of an unnamed family of viruses. ASFV is the only known DNA arbovirus (4, 6, 12). The natural arthropod host for ASFV is Ornithodoros porcinus porcinus (Walton) ticks (40). Some confusion exists in earlier reports since ticks that should be classified as O. porcinus porcinus are often referred to as either O. moubata porcinus or simply O. moubata (59).ASFV can infect hosts through either a sylvatic cycle or a domestic cycle. In the sylvatic cycle, ASFV infects warthogs (Phacochoerus aethiopicus) and bushpigs (Potamochoerus spp.) as well as ticks of the genus Ornithodoros (710, 36, 55). In sub-Saharan Africa, warthogs occupy burrows which are frequently infested with large numbers of O. porcinus porcinus ticks (38, 45, 57, 58), and a correlation, though not absolute, has been established between ASFV infection of warthogs and the presence of O. porcinus porcinus ticks in burrows (57). In ASFV-enzootic areas, adult warthogs are typically nonviremic, although most are seropositive (28, 41, 46, 53, 58), and virus can usually be isolated only from lymph nodes (28, 41). Young warthogs, which are confined to the burrow for the first months of life, are most likely to be infected through feeding of infected O. porcinus porcinus ticks. Infection in young warthogs is subclinical, with viremic titers ranging from 2 to 3 log10 50% hemadsorption dose (HAD50)/ml (56, 57), a level sufficient to infect a low percentage of naive ticks (42, 58, 30). The sylvatic ASFV cycle is further maintained by transovarial (43) and venereal (44) transmission in ticks. In burrows containing ASFV-infected ticks, infection rates are typically low (<2%), with the highest rate occurring in adult females (40, 45, 57, 65). The mechanism of ASFV transmission from the sylvatic cycle in Africa to the domestic cycle is most likely through feeding of infected ticks on pigs (41, 58), since direct contact between infected warthogs and domestic pigs has failed to result in transmission (36, 10, 28, 58), except in a single case (8). The virus may be transmitted between domestic pigs by either direct or indirect contact (33).Various characteristics of ASFV infection have been studied in a number of Ornithodoros spp. ticks. The first association of ASFV with a tick was made by Sanchez-Botija (50), who reported isolation of ASFV from O. erraticus, a tick native to the Iberian peninsula and later considered important to maintenance of ASFV in an enzootic cycle in that region (51). In the first experimental infection, striking differences were found in the percentage of O. moubata porcinus ticks infected by two different ASFV isolates, a low infectious dose for ticks (ranging from of 0.9 to 4 log10 HAD50) was demonstrated, and transmission out to 469 days postinfection (p.i.) was successful with single ticks (42). Experimental ASFV infection and transmission to pigs has been demonstrated for O. savignyi, a tick found in Africa (34), O. coriaceus (23, 25) and O. turicata (25), ticks indigenous to the United States, and O. puertoricensis (25, 14), a tick indigenous to the Caribbean. A 40% mortality rate was found in infected O. coriaceus (25) and O. puertoricensis ticks (15). O. marocanus, which was formerly referred to as O. erraticus, transmitted ASFV out to 588 days p.i., although 73% mortality was reported for infected ticks (16, 17). A number of reports have not found significant virus-induced mortality in O. moubata porcinus ticks (22, 4044). In contrast, mortality rates were 35% higher in infected O. moubata porcinus females in the only study to examine mortality during the gonotrophic cycle (26).Specific aspects of ASFV infection in the natural host remain poorly understood. Greig (22) experimentally infected O. moubata porcinus ticks with pathogenic ASFV isolates and used virus titration and immunofluorescence of dissected tissues to determine that the midgut was the initial site of viral replication and the site of longest persistence. Several other tissues were also found to have detectable levels of virus, although the midgut was the only tissue which was consistently positive. The presence of ASFV has been demonstrated in hemocytes of infected O. coriaceus ticks by electron microscopy and immunofluorescence studies, but the presence or nature of virus replication was not addressed (13).Here we describe the pathogenesis and persistence of ASFV infection in O. porcinus porcinus ticks. Our data indicate that initial ASFV replication occurs in phagocytic digestive cells of the midgut epithelium, with secondary replication occurring in undifferentiated midgut cells at later times p.i. Generalization of virus infection from the midgut to other tick tissues required 2 to 3 weeks. Secondary sites of virus replication include hemocytes (type I and II), coxal gland, salivary gland, connective tissue, and reproductive tissue. Successful tick-to-pig transmission correlated with relatively high viral titers in salivary and coxal glands. Persistent infection in the tick involves continuous viral replication in several tissues and is associated with minimal cytopathology.  相似文献   

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马立克氏病病毒(Marek’sdiseasevirus,MDV)是一种能诱导鸡淋巴组织增生或淋巴肿瘤的细胞结合性疱疹病毒,由此而引起的马立克氏病(Marek’sdisease,MD)也是迄今为止唯一可以利用疫苗进行有效控制的肿瘤性疾病。鉴于此,作为研...  相似文献   

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African swine fever virus (ASFV), like other complex DNA viruses, deploys a variety of strategies to evade the host''s defence systems, such as inflammatory and immune responses and cell death. Here, we analyse the modifications in the translational machinery induced by ASFV. During ASFV infection, eIF4G and eIF4E are phosphorylated (Ser1108 and Ser209, respectively), whereas 4E-BP1 is hyperphosphorylated at early times post infection and hypophosphorylated after 18 h. Indeed, a potent increase in eIF4F assembly is observed in ASFV-infected cells, which is prevented by rapamycin treatment. Phosphorylation of eIF4E, eIF4GI and 4E-BP1 is important to enhance viral protein production, but is not essential for ASFV infection as observed in rapamycin- or CGP57380-treated cells. Nevertheless, eIF4F components are indispensable for ASFV protein synthesis and virus spread, since eIF4E or eIF4G depletion in COS-7 or Vero cells strongly prevents accumulation of viral proteins and decreases virus titre. In addition, eIF4F is not only activated but also redistributed within the viral factories at early times of infection, while eIF4G and eIF4E are surrounding these areas at late times. In fact, other components of translational machinery such as eIF2α, eIF3b, eIF4E, eEF2 and ribosomal P protein are enriched in areas surrounding ASFV factories. Notably, the mitochondrial network is polarized in ASFV-infected cells co-localizing with ribosomes. Thus, translation and ATP synthesis seem to be coupled and compartmentalized at the periphery of viral factories. At later times after ASFV infection, polyadenylated mRNAs disappear from the cytoplasm of Vero cells, except within the viral factories. The distribution of these pools of mRNAs is similar to the localization of viral late mRNAs. Therefore, degradation of cellular polyadenylated mRNAs and recruitment of the translation machinery to viral factories may contribute to the inhibition of host protein synthesis, facilitating ASFV protein production in infected cells.  相似文献   

17.
非洲猪瘟病毒的分子生物学研究进展   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
常华  花群义  段纲 《微生物学通报》2007,34(3):0572-0575
非洲猪瘟是一类动物传染病,致死率高达100%,在我国虽未发现该病,但一旦发生会给畜牧养殖业带来巨大经济损失。文中概述了非洲猪瘟病毒的分类、形态、基因组特征、主要结构蛋白,以及分子生物学诊断技术的研究进展。为进一步研究该病毒的复制机理、毒力、致病机理及疫苗的开发提供参考依据。  相似文献   

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曾喻兵  李飞  朱玲  徐志文 《病毒学报》2021,37(4):957-963
非洲猪瘟(African swine fever,ASF)是由非洲猪瘟病毒(African swine fever virus,ASFV)感染引起的一种急性、热性、高度接触性、致死性动物传染病.由于ASFV基因组庞大,变异能力强,免疫逃逸机制复杂,至今无有效药物和疫苗.近年来,对多基因家族的研究取得了很大的进展,可变区多基因家族拷贝数变化是导致ASFV变异的主要原因,且陆续发现多基因家族在决定细胞宿主范围、影响病毒毒力强弱、抑制Ⅰ型干扰素信号通路、抑制干扰素抗病毒效应和促进病毒蜱源感染中具有重要作用.本文对当前的ASFV多基因家族研究进展进行总结,阐述其在基因变异和病毒感染中的作用,以期为非洲猪瘟免疫逃逸机制的探索和疫苗的研发提供理论依据.  相似文献   

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The herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) strain McKrae is highly virulent compared to other wild-type strains of HSV-1. To help us better understand the genetic determinants that lead to differences in the pathogenicity of McKrae and other HSV-1 strains, we sequenced its genome. Comparing the sequence of McKrae's genome to that of strain 17 revealed that the genomes differ by at least 752 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and 86 insertion/deletion events (indels). Although the majority of these polymorphisms reside in noncoding regions, 241 SNPs and 10 indels alter the protein-coding sequences of 58 open reading frames. Some of these variations are expected to contribute to the pathogenic phenotype of McKrae.  相似文献   

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