Literature DB >> 19940061

In vitro and in vivo characterization of glycoprotein C-deleted infectious laryngotracheitis virus.

Sophia P Pavlova1, Jutta Veits, Ulrike Blohm, Christina Maresch, Thomas C Mettenleiter, Walter Fuchs.   

Abstract

Infectious laryngotracheitis is an important respiratory disease of chickens that is caused by an alphaherpesvirus [infectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV); Gallid herpesvirus 1]. As herpesvirus envelope glycoproteins are main targets of the humoral host immune response, they are of particular interest for development of vaccines, as well as of diagnostic tools. The conserved, N-glycosylated envelope protein gC has been identified as a major surface antigen of ILTV. To study the function of gC, we now isolated a gC-deleted ILTV recombinant as well as a gC rescuant after co-transfection of permissive chicken cells with virion DNA and transfer plasmids containing engineered subgenomic fragments. Like other alphaherpesvirus homologues, ILTV gC proved to be non-essential for replication. ILTV-DeltagC exhibited delayed penetration kinetics and slightly reduced plaque sizes in cultured chicken cells, whereas virus titres were not reduced significantly compared with wild-type or gC-rescued virus. In vivo studies revealed that ILTV-DeltagC is attenuated in chickens. However, infection with high doses of ILTV-DeltagC was still fatal for approximately 20 % of the animals, whereas wild-type or gC-rescued ILTV led to 50 % mortality. Interestingly, innate and specific immune responses against ILTV-DeltagC were not reduced but enhanced, and surviving chickens were protected completely against challenge infection. Furthermore, ILTV-DeltagC might serve as a basis for marker vaccines permitting differentiation between vaccinated and field-virus-infected animals, as gC-specific antibodies could be detected easily in sera of animals infected with wild-type ILTV.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19940061     DOI: 10.1099/vir.0.016634-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gen Virol        ISSN: 0022-1317            Impact factor:   3.891


  7 in total

Review 1.  Infectious laryngotracheitis virus in chickens.

Authors:  Shan-Chia Ou; Joseph J Giambrone
Journal:  World J Virol       Date:  2012-10-12

2.  First complete genome sequence of infectious laryngotracheitis virus.

Authors:  Sang-Won Lee; Philip F Markham; John F Markham; Ivonne Petermann; Amir H Noormohammadi; Glenn F Browning; Nino P Ficorilli; Carol A Hartley; Joanne M Devlin
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2011-04-19       Impact factor: 3.969

3.  Methylome Analysis in Chickens Immunized with Infectious Laryngotracheitis Vaccine.

Authors:  José A Carrillo; Yanghua He; Juan Luo; Kimberly R Menendez; Nathaniel L Tablante; Keji Zhao; Joseph N Paulson; Bichun Li; Jiuzhou Song
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-06-24       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Determination of the minimum protective dose of a glycoprotein-G-deficient infectious laryngotracheitis virus vaccine delivered via eye-drop to week-old chickens.

Authors:  Mesula G Korsa; Joanne M Devlin; Carol A Hartley; Glenn F Browning; Mauricio J C Coppo; José A Quinteros; Carlos A Loncoman; Adepeju E Onasanya; Dulari Thilakarathne; Andrés Diaz-Méndez
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-12-06       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Attenuated infectious laryngotracheitis virus vaccines differ in their capacity to establish latency in the trigeminal ganglia of specific pathogen free chickens following eye drop inoculation.

Authors:  Dulari S Thilakarathne; Mauricio J C Coppo; Carol A Hartley; Andrés Diaz-Méndez; José A Quinteros; Omid Fakhri; Paola K Vaz; Joanne M Devlin
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-03-28       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Infectious laryngotracheitis: Etiology, epidemiology, pathobiology, and advances in diagnosis and control - a comprehensive review.

Authors:  Vasudevan Gowthaman; Sachin Kumar; Monika Koul; Urmil Dave; T R Gopala Krishna Murthy; Palanivelu Munuswamy; Ruchi Tiwari; Kumaragurubaran Karthik; Kuldeep Dhama; Izabela Michalak; Sunil K Joshi
Journal:  Vet Q       Date:  2020-12       Impact factor: 3.320

7.  The Requirement of Glycoprotein C for Interindividual Spread Is Functionally Conserved within the Alphaherpesvirus Genus (Mardivirus), but Not the Host (Gallid).

Authors:  Widaliz Vega-Rodriguez; Nagendraprabhu Ponnuraj; Maricarmen Garcia; Keith W Jarosinski
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2021-07-21       Impact factor: 5.048

  7 in total

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