| Literature DB >> 33625352 |
Xiaohui Zou1, Yejing Rong2,1, Xiaojuan Guo1, Wenzhe Hou1, Bingyu Yan3,1, Tao Hung1, Zhuozhuang Lu4,5,1.
Abstract
Fibre is the viral protein that mediates the attachment and infection of adenovirus to the host cell. Fowl adenovirus 4 (FAdV-4) possesses two different fibre trimers on each penton capsomere, and roles of the separate fibres remain elusive. Here, we attempted to investigate the function of FAdV-4 fibres by using reverse genetics approaches. Adenoviral plasmids carrying fiber1 or fiber2 mutant genes were constructed and used to transfect chicken LMH cells. Fiber1-mutated recombinant virus could not be rescued. Such defective phenotype was complemented when a fiber1-bearing helper plasmid was included for co-transfection. The infection of fiber-intact FAdV-4 (FAdV4-GFP) to LMH cells could be blocked with purified fiber1 knob protein in a dose-dependent manner, while purifed fiber2 knob had no such function. On the contrary, fiber2-mutated FAdV-4, FAdV4XF2-GFP, was successfully rescued. The results of one-step growth curves showed that proliferative capacity of FAdV4XF2-GFP was 10 times lower than that of the control FAdV4-GFP. FAdV4XF2-GFP also caused fewer deaths of infected chicken embryos than FAdV4-GFP did, which resulted from poorer virus replication in vivo. These data illustrated that fiber1 mediated virus adsorption and was essential for FAdV-4, while fiber2 was dispensable although it significantly contributed to the virulence.Entities:
Keywords: essential gene; fiber; fowl adenovirus; reverse genetics; virus adsorption
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33625352 DOI: 10.1099/jgv.0.001559
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Virol ISSN: 0022-1317 Impact factor: 3.891