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Biochemical characterization of salmon pancreas disease virus.

Authors :
Welsh M
Weston J
Borghmans BJ
Mackie D
Rowley H
Nelson R
McLoughlin M
Todd D
Source :
The Journal of general virology [J Gen Virol] 2000 Mar; Vol. 81 (Pt 3), pp. 813-20.
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

Salmon pancreas disease virus (SPDV) has been shown to cause severe economic losses in farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) and has been reported to occur in Europe, Scandinavia and the United States. This paper describes the biochemical characterization of SPDV in terms of its RNA and protein composition. SPDV was purified by precipitation from infected Chinook salmon embryo (CHSE-214) cell-culture supernatant and sucrose density-gradient centrifugation. Fractions containing virus were identified by an immunodot blot assay using an SPDV-specific MAb. Two major proteins with molecular masses of approximately 55 and 50 kDa, putatively identified as the E1 and E2 alphavirus glycoproteins respectively, were detected when purified virus preparations were analysed by PAGE. Radiolabelling experiments indicated that SPDV infection of CHSE-214 cells did not shut-off host-cell protein synthesis, making attempts to identify virus-specific proteins unsuccessful. However, radioimmunoprecipitation assay (RIPA) experiments showed that two SPDV-specific MAbs reacted with a protein in the 50-55 kDa range. Northern blot hybridization with cloned cDNA probes indicated that infected cells contained RNA species of approximately 11.4 and 4 kb, which correspond to the genomic and subgenomic RNAs specified by SPDV. The results described are consistent with SPDV being characterized as an alphavirus.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0022-1317
Volume :
81
Issue :
Pt 3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of general virology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
10675419
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1099/0022-1317-81-3-813