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Utilization of Chimeras between Human (HM-175) and Simian (AGM-27) Strains of Hepatitis A Virus To Study the Molecular Basis of Virulence
Authors:Gopa Raychaudhuri   Sugantha Govindarajan   Max Shapiro   Robert H. Purcell      Suzanne U. Emerson
Affiliation:Laboratory of Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bethesda, Maryland 208921.; Rancho Los Amigos Hospital, Downey, California 902422.; and Bioqual Inc., Gaithersburg, Maryland 208503.
Abstract:Chimeras between human (HM-175) and simian (AGM-27) strains of hepatitis A virus (HAV) were constructed to evaluate the effect of the 2C gene of AGM-27 on HAV replication in cell culture and virulence in tamarins (Saguinus mystax) and chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). Kinetic studies and radioimmunofocus assays demonstrated that replacement of the 2C gene of HAV/7, a cell culture-adapted strain of HM-175, with that of AGM-27 drastically reduced the ability of the virus to replicate in cultured cells. Intragenic chimeras containing AGM-27 sequences in either the 5′ or 3′ half of the 2C gene replicated in cell culture at an intermediate level. Whereas HAV/7 is attenuated for tamarins, a chimera containing the simian virus 2C gene in the HAV/7 background was virulent in tamarins, demonstrating that the simian virus 2C gene alone can confer the phenotype of virulence to an otherwise attenuated virus. Clusters of AGM-27-specific residues near both ends of the 2C protein were required for virulence since a chimera containing AGM-27 sequences in the carboxy-terminal half of 2C was partially attenuated for tamarins while one containing AGM-27 sequences only in the amino-terminal half of 2C was even more attenuated. Chimeras containing either the entire or only the 3′ half of the simian virus 2C gene in the HAV/7 background were attenuated for chimpanzees.
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