Title of article :
Species-specific deletion of the viral attachment glycoprotein of avian metapneumovirus
Author/Authors :
Byung-Whi Kong، نويسنده , , Linda K. Foster، نويسنده , , Douglas N. Foster، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
The avian metapneumovirus (AMPV) genome encodes the fusion (F), small hydrophobic (SH), and attachment glycoprotein (G) as envelope glycoproteins. The F and G proteins mainly function to allow viral entry into host cells during the early steps of the virus life cycle. The highly variable AMPV G protein is a major determinant for distinguishing virus subtypes. Sequence analysis was used to determine if any differences between avian or mammalian cell propagated subtype C AMPV could be detected for the 1.8 kb G gene. As a result, the complete 1.8 kb G gene was found to be present when AMPV was propagated in our immortal turkey turbinate (TT-1) cell line regardless of passage number. Surprisingly, AMPV propagated for 15 or more passages in mammalian Vero cells revealed an essentially deleted G gene in the viral genome, resulting in no G gene mRNA expression. Although the Vero cell propagated AMPV genome contained a small 122 nucleotide fragment of the G gene, no other mRNA variants were detected from either mammalian or avian propagated AMPV. The G gene truncation might be caused by cellular molecular mechanisms that are species-specific. The lack of viral gene deletions suggests that avian cell propagated AMPV will provide a better alternative host for live recombinant vaccine development based on a reverse genetics system.
Keywords :
avian metapneumovirus , Turkey turbinate cell , Attachment glycoprotein gene
Journal title :
Virus Research
Journal title :
Virus Research