Host range mutants of Minute Virus of Mice with a single VP2 amino acid change require additional silent mutations that regulate NS2 accumulation

Two host range switch mutants of the immunosuppressive strain of parvovirus Minute Virus of Mice (MVMi) were isolated from plaques on A9 fibroblasts. Both carried a single coding mutation at residue D399 in VP2, to alanine and glycine in hr105 and hr107, respectively, and a second, non-coding, guani...

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Veröffentlicht in:Virology (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2005-09, Vol.340 (1), p.143-154
Hauptverfasser: D'Abramo, Anthony M., Ali, A. Afshan, Wang, Feng, Cotmore, Susan F., Tattersall, Peter
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Two host range switch mutants of the immunosuppressive strain of parvovirus Minute Virus of Mice (MVMi) were isolated from plaques on A9 fibroblasts. Both carried a single coding mutation at residue D399 in VP2, to alanine and glycine in hr105 and hr107, respectively, and a second, non-coding, guanine-to-adenine change at nucleotide 1970 in hr105 and 1967 in hr107. These mutations were recreated in a wild type MVMi infectious plasmid clone, both alone and as pairs, in either the original or switched combinations. All single mutants failed to replicate productively in fibroblasts, but the two pairs of changes were functionally equivalent. Single D399 mutations allowed the viruses to initiate infection in fibroblasts, but NS2 expression was severely restricted and correlated with poor accumulation and release of progeny virus. Mutations at 1967 or 1970 enhanced NS2 accumulation, and allowed efficient progeny production and release. Conversely, the D399 mutations destroyed the viruses' ability to infect EL4 lymphocytes. In all productive EL4 infections, NS2 was expressed at high ratios even in the absence of upstream mutations, and progeny accumulation was efficient. However, EL4 cells lack a mechanism for early progeny release, potentially explaining why virus amplification in these cells is slow.
ISSN:0042-6822
1096-0341
DOI:10.1016/j.virol.2005.06.019