1. The surface envelope protein gene region of equine infectious anemia virus is not an important determinant of tropism in vitro.
- Author
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Perry ST, Flaherty MT, Kelley MJ, Clabough DL, Tronick SR, Coggins L, Whetter L, Lengel CR, and Fuller F
- Subjects
- Animals, Base Sequence, Cell Line, DNA, Viral, Equine Infectious Anemia microbiology, Horses, Infectious Anemia Virus, Equine pathogenicity, Infectious Anemia Virus, Equine physiology, Kinetics, Molecular Sequence Data, Phenotype, Proviruses genetics, Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid, Virulence genetics, Virus Replication, Infectious Anemia Virus, Equine genetics, Viral Envelope Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Virulent, wild-type equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) is restricted in one or more early steps in replication in equine skin fibroblast cells compared with cell culture-adapted virus, which is fully competent for replication in this cell type. We compared the sequences of wild-type EIAV and a full-length infectious proviral clone of the cell culture-adapted EIAV and found that the genomes were relatively well conserved with the exception of the envelope gene region, which showed extensive sequence differences. We therefore constructed several wild-type and cell culture-adapted virus chimeras to examine the role of the envelope gene in replication in different cell types in vitro. Unlike wild-type virus, which is restricted by an early event(s) for replication in equine dermis cells, the wild-type outer envelope gene chimeras are replication competent in this cell type. We conclude that even though there are extensive sequence differences between wild-type and cell culture-adapted viruses in the surface envelope gene region, this domain is not a determinant of the differing in vitro cell tropisms.
- Published
- 1992
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