Literature DB >> 6270249

Effect of mutation on the virulence in mice of a strain of foot-and-mouth disease virus.

D McCahon, W R Slade, A M King, K Saunders, L Pullen, J R Lake, R A Priston.   

Abstract

Twenty-eight mutations, representing mutation in five different polypeptide-coding regions of the foot-and-mouth disease genome, were examined for their effect on the virulence of the virus for suckling mice. Five types of mutation were examined: temperature-sensitive (ts), electrophoretic (e), co-variant temperature-sensitive and electrophoretic (ts/e), guanidine-resistant (gs+) and putative co-variant guanidine-resistant and electrophoretic (gs+/e). All the ts mutations and three out of the 11 non-ts mutations produced some reductions in virulence. In the majority of cases this reduction in virulence was shown to co-vary with the mutation. No correlation was observed between the site of a mutation or its 'cut-off' temperature and the extent of the reduction in virulence. Studies of the growth in vivo of a small selection of ts mutants suggested that for most mutants their reduced virulence was a trivial effect of their slow growth rate. With one exception they all eventually grew to parental virus levels, the resulting virus being temperature-sensitive and the disease indistinguishable from that caused by the parental virus. The one exception was an avirulent ts mutant which only grew to one-thousandth the titre of the parent virus. This mutant did not cause disease and was therefore considered to be the only avirulent mutant. Its mutation was in the coat protein-coding region of the genome, probably the region coding for VP3.

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Year:  1981        PMID: 6270249     DOI: 10.1099/0022-1317-54-2-263

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


  3 in total

Review 1.  The genetics of aphthovirus. Brief review.

Authors:  D McCahon
Journal:  Arch Virol       Date:  1981       Impact factor: 2.574

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Authors:  A Rodolakis
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  1983-11       Impact factor: 3.441

3.  Effects of invasion history on physiological responses to immune system activation in invasive Australian cane toads.

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Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2017-10-06       Impact factor: 2.984

  3 in total

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