| Literature DB >> 9159195 |
F J Jenkins1, A M Donoghue, J R Martin.
Abstract
We have isolated three different herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) recombinant viruses, each frozen in either the P (prototype), IS (inversion of S component), or ILS (inversion of both components) genome arrangement. Common to all three recombinant viruses is the deletion of approximately 14 kilobases (kb) of viral DNA sequences representing greater than 95% of the internal repeat sequences and the insertion of a 9.6 kb mini-Mu genome containing a functional thymidine kinase gene. No unique DNA sequences were deleted from the viral genomes. Analyses of growth curves of the wild-type and recombinant viruses in cell culture has revealed that the recombinants grow somewhat more slowly, producing final titers within 1.5 logs of wild-type HSV-1(F). There is no discernible difference in plaque size or plaque morphology between the recombinant and wild type strains. Analysis of the recombinant viruses in mice reveals the following: I), the recombinant viruses are essentially avirulent, exhibiting drastically increased LD50 values as compared to the wild-type strain by intracerebral injection; ii), the recombinant viruses are not neuroinvasive in that they do not spread from the cornea to sensory ganglion; iii), the recombinant viruses exhibit minimal local replication both in the corneas of infected mice and in the brains of mice inoculated by intracerebral injection; and iv), the recombinant viruses do not establish a reactivable latent infection in the trigeminal ganglion following either intracerebral inoculation or inoculation of scarified corneas. These properties suggest a unique pattern of pathogenesis for HSV mutants in the mouse model.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1996 PMID: 9159195 DOI: 10.2741/a106
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Biosci ISSN: 1093-4715