| Literature DB >> 30594230 |
Chao Ye1, Jiqiang Wu1, Wu Tong1,2, Tongling Shan1,2, Xuefei Cheng1, Jingjing Xu1, Chao Liang1, Hao Zheng1,2, Guoxin Li3,4, Guangzhi Tong5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pseudorabies virus (PRV) of the family Herpesviridae is the causative agent of Aujeszky's disease. Attenuation of PRV by serial passaging in vitro is a well-established method; however, the dynamic variations occurring on viral genome during this process have not been characterized.Entities:
Keywords: Attenuation; Dynamic variation; Genomic analyses; Passaging; Pseudorabies virus
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30594230 PMCID: PMC6310976 DOI: 10.1186/s12985-018-1102-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Amino acid variations identified in the F50, F91 and F120 passages of PRV JS-2012
| Gene | Amino acid variations found in F50, F91, and F120 compared to JS-2012a | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| F50 | F91 | F120 | |
| UL6 | P542S, P553S | P542S, P553S | P542S, P553S |
| UL8 | S542A | S542A | S542A |
| UL10 (gM) | V256A | V256A | V256A |
| UL15 | G169E, P669D | G169E, P669D | G169E, P669D |
| UL16 | ND | 317(+LPRH), S322P, 325–327(IPE > NKR), 329–330(IN>LK), 331–332(DY>△) | 317(+LPRH), S322P, 325–327(IPE > NKR), 329–330(IN>LK), 331–332(DY>△) |
| UL17 | G237D, A241S, T249A, P253△, A255P, D258A, 259(+GGG), N263D, P273L, P374L | G237D, A241S, T249A, P253△, A255P, D258A, 259(+GGG), N263D, P273L, P374L | G237D, A241S, T249A, P253△, A255P, D258A, 259(+GGG), N263D, P273L, P374L |
| UL18 (VP23) | H47Y, P60A, H69Q, S79G, A142V, T270 M | H47D, P60A, S79G, A142G, T270 M | H47D, P60A, S79G, A142G, T270 M |
| UL19 (VP5) | I178M, I1315T | I178M | I178M |
| UL22 (gH) | P433L, A618V | P433L, A618V | P433L, A618V |
| UL25 | L23P | L23P | L23P |
| UL26 (VP24) | M124 T, I125L, R131L, S132C, Q136R, S137R, R139G, L143 V, T146A, V153A, Q161R | M124 T, I125L, R131L, S132C, Q136R, S137 V, R139G, L143 V, T146A, V153A, Q161R, A455△ | M124 T, I125L, R131L, S132C, Q136R, S137R, R139G, L143 V, T146A, V153A, Q161R |
| UL26.5 | ND | A216△ | ND |
| UL28 (ICP18.5) | A413P, D414E, D425G, 425(+GA), V430G, D432G, A522V | A413P, D414E, D425G, V430G, D432G, A522V | A413P, D414E, D425G, 425(+GA), V430G, D432G, A522V |
| UL33 | P39A | P39A | P39A |
| UL34 | A177V, T178S | A177V, T178S | A177V, T178S |
| UL36 (VP1/2) | T2832A | T2832A | T2832A |
| UL37 | E240D, F629 L, G762R | E240D, F629 L, G762R | E240D, F629 L, G762R |
| UL38 (VP19c) | A218V | A218V | A218V |
| UL40 (RR2) | A176T | A176T | A176T |
| UL44 (gC) | R107H | G90D, R107H | G90D, R107H |
| UL46 (VP11/12) | ND | ND | 599–626(PLTRHGSMRTSFRRGVRAAQRFVRRRLS>△), 629–631(SAE > TTT), A633P, 635–674(RASGDSASAAAPAAASARGETDHVYQHPRPRTRADDGLYQ>△), Q675G, 678–695(PVIDLTGHRASRRKSWRV>△) |
| UL48 (VP16) | R39Q,P89A | R39Q,P89A | R39Q,P89A |
| UL49 (VP22) | R168H, N198D | R168H | R168H |
| UL49.5 (gN) | T87A | T87A | T87A |
| UL50 (dUTPase) | S209A | S209A | G191R,S209A |
| UL53 (gK) | P164L, P171L | P164L, P171L | P164L, P171L |
| UL54 (ICP27) | W20R, C48R, S156F,Q182R | W20R, C48R, S156F,Q182R | W20R, C48R,S156F,Q182R |
| US8 (gE), US9, US2 | Deletion | Deletion | Deletion |
| IE180 (ICP4) | P468S, G1385R | S187 L, P468S, G1385R | L76P, P468S, G1385R |
ND referred to no difference
aSingle amino acid residues changes were recored in the following format, including the JS-2012 reference strain amino acid, its position, and the amino acid residue found in the passaged strains. Insertions were indicated by the amino acid position in JS-2012 followed by “+” and the new amino acid in passaged strains. Deletions were indicated by the symbol △. Sequential changes are shown with the JS-2012 amino acid positions first, followed by the relevant JS-2012 amino acid residues, then with “>”, and finally the alternative amino aicd residues of passaged strains
Indels identified in passaged strains compared to the parental virus (JS-2012)
aNumbers show the initial position of the sequence relative to the ATG of the corresponding ORF in JS-2012. Nucleotide insertions are shown in red and deletions are represented with hyphens. The “+ 287 nt” indicates 287 additional nucleotides at the 3′ end of the UL46 ORF of JS-2012 compared to that of F120
Fig. 1In vitro and in vivo characteristics of the JS-2012 and its passaged strains. a One-step growth curves. PK-15 cells were infected at an MOI of 1 with each virus. Cell culture supernatants were harvested at 4, 8, 12, 18, 24, 36, and 48 h post infection. Virus titers at each time point were determined by the TCID50 assay in Vero cells. The data represented means ± SD for 2 independent experiments per data point. b Plaques of JS-2012 and the serial passaged strains generated in infected PK-15 cells cultured at 37 °C for 4 days. c Relative plaque diameters of each virus were calculated and compared to those of PRV JS-2012. Meanwhile the average plaque diameter of PRV JS-2012 were set as 1. d Survival percentages of mice inoculated with 104 TCID50 of each virus per mouse. In JS-2012-infected group, a total of 2 mice were heavily infected and dead at 3 days post inoculation, and another 3 mice with severe neurological symptoms (self-mutilation) were euthanized respectively for animal welfare reasons; in F50-infected group, 2 of 10 mice exhibited severe pruritus and self-mutilation symptoms and were euthanized for animal welfare reasons at 5 days post inoculation; The remaining 43 mice in control group and JS-2012, F50, F91, F120-infected groups were survived and then euthanized till the end of the experiment
Fig. 2Summary of single nucleotide variations identified in F50, F91 and F120, versus the parental strain JS-2012. Gene names and functions were listed on the left. Single nucleotide variations identified in each virus were categorized as being unique to F50 (orange), unique to F91 (blue), unique to F120 (green) or shared (observed in two or three of the passaged strains; gray). And the three genes deleted in passaged strains were bracketed at the bottom
Fig. 3Analysis of the frameshifts mutations occurred in the UL46 and UL16 genes during serial passage. a Sequencing data of the 3’ RACE of UL16 (top) and UL46 (bottom) of each strain. The positions of the frameshift mutations are marked with black rectangles. b Transcription termination analysis of UL16 (top) and UL46 (bottom) in each strain. The results of the 3’ RACE PCR amplification and sequencing data with the transcription termination site and the poly(A) sequences underlined are shown. c The length of the ORFs of each strain were predicted with ORF Finder and the corresponding protein molecular weights were then calculated using the EditSeq module implemented in DNASTAR. d Western blot analysis of protein levels inter-strain variation of UL46 and UL16. Cell lysates were hybridized with anti-gE antibodies to confirm deletion of gE in the passaged strains. The capsid protein VP5 is shown for comparison and as a loading control. Actin was also detected as a loading control. The ratios of UL46 or UL16 versus VP5 in each sample were calculated using the ImageJ Gel Analyzer module