Deleting valine-125 and cysteine-126 in glycoprotein gI of pseudorabies virus strain NIA-3 decreases plaque size and reduces virulence in mice
- 1 September 1993
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Archiv für die gesamte Virusforschung
- Vol. 131 (3-4) , 251-264
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01378630
Abstract
We investigated the function of antigenic domains on gI in virulence and immunogenicity. Three PRV gI mutants were constructed by deleting nucleotides coding for the following amino acids: valine-125 and cysteine-126, located in a discontinuous antigenic domain (M 303); glycine-59 and aspartic acid-60 located in a continuous antigenic domain (M 304); and arginine-67 and alanine-68, located in a discontinuous antigenic domain (M 305). Mismatch primers in the polymerase chain reaction were used to introduce the deletions. Anti-gI monoclonal antibodies were used in an immunoperoxidase monolayer assay to distinguish PRV gI mutants from wild-type PRV. The gI mutant viruses were tested for their growth in vitro and for their virulence in mice. The growth properties of PRV gI mutant virus M 303 were comparable to the growth properties of a PRV gI-negative mutant (M 301): both mutants produced small plaques in various cells, and when grown on swine kidney cells and chicken embryo fibroblasts, their growth was disadvantaged compared to wild-type PRV. However, in embryonal Balb/c mouse cells expressing gI, gI mutant viruses and wild-type PRV produced plaques of the same size, confirming that the mutations in gI are responsible for the small plaque phenotype. The growth properties of PRV gI mutant viruses M 304 and M 305 were comparable to the growth properties of wild-type PRV. When the mean time to death was used as the criterion, the gI mutant viruses M 301 and M 303 were significantly less virulent in mice than wild-type PRV. Four other, independently obtained, PRV mutants all carrying the valine-125 and cysteine-126 deletion (M 308, M 309, M 310 and M 311 respectively) exhibit the same phenotype. Our results show that deleting valine-125 and cysteine-126 in gI decreases plaque size and reduces virulence in mice to the same degree as deleting the gI protein.Keywords
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