Literature DB >> 8395801

Recovery of acutely transforming viruses from myeloid leukosis induced by the HPRS-103 strain of avian leukosis virus.

L N Payne1, A M Gillespie, K Howes.   

Abstract

Viruses rapidly able to transform cultured chicken bone marrow cells have been isolated from cases of myelocytic myeloid leukosis (MML) induced experimentally by the HPRS-103 strain of avian leukosis virus, and from field cases of MML. HPRS-103 virus itself did not acutely transform cultured bone-marrow cells. These findings suggest that during myeloid leukemogenesis by HPRS-103 virus, recombinant viruses are generated with transduced cellular oncogenes. The transformed cell appeared to be a macrophage precursor cell. Transformed cells in culture lost their proliferative capacity after a few weeks and then tended to resemble more differentiated macrophages. This change could be reversed temporarily by addition of a myelomonocytic growth factor, cMGF, to the culture medium. In oncogenicity tests, a selection of the virus strains induced MML, nephroblastomas, renal adenomas/adenocarcinomas, and other tumors in line 21 meat-type chickens but not in line 0 chickens. This difference may have been related to a propensity for the virus strains to induce persistent tolerant viremic infections in the line 21 chickens following infection at 1 day of age. The oncogenic pattern was not clearly related to the ability of the viruses to transform cultured bone-marrow cells. The generation of acutely transforming viruses during myeloid leukemogenesis may be relevant to the occurrence of MML in the field.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8395801

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Avian Dis        ISSN: 0005-2086            Impact factor:   1.577


  12 in total

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10.  gga-miR-375 plays a key role in tumorigenesis post subgroup J avian leukosis virus infection.

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