African swine fever virus encodes a CD2 homolog responsible for the adhesion of erythrocytes to infected cells.
AUTOR(ES)
Rodríguez, J M
RESUMO
We have identified an open reading frame, EP402R, within the EcoRI E' fragment of the African swine fever virus genome that encodes a polypeptide of 402 amino acid residues homologous to the adhesion receptor of T cells, CD2. Transcription of EP402R takes place during the late phase of virus replication. The disruption of EP402R, achieved through the replacement of a 354-bp-long fragment from within EP402R by the marker gene lacZ, does not affect the virus growth rate in vitro but abrogates the ability of the virus to induce the adsorption of pig erythrocytes to the surface of infected cells. This result demonstrates that the protein encoded by EP402R is directly involved in the hemadsorption phenomenon induced by the infection of susceptible cells with African swine fever virus.
ACESSO AO ARTIGO
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=237930Documentos Relacionados
- Requirement of cell nucleus for African swine fever virus replication in Vero cells.
- Migration of Mitochondria to Viral Assembly Sites in African Swine Fever Virus-Infected Cells
- The trans Golgi Network Is Lost from Cells Infected with African Swine Fever Virus
- Functionality and Cell Anchorage Dependence of the African Swine Fever Virus Gene A179L, a Viral bcl-2 Homolog, in Insect Cells
- An African swine fever virus Bc1-2 homolog, 5-HL, suppresses apoptotic cell death.