Comparison of the ability of lactate dehydrogenase-elevating virus and its virion RNA to infect murine leukemia virus-infected or -uninfected cell lines.

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

Lactate dehydrogenase-elevating virus (LDV) has a strict species specificity. Cells or cell lines other than a particular subset of mouse primary macrophages which can support LDV replication in vitro have not been identified. LDV induces neurological disorders in old C58 or AKR strains, in which the involvement of multiple copies of the endogenous N-tropic murine leukemia virus (MuLV) genome and the Fv-1 locus of the mouse has been implicated. Our previous studies have demonstrated that LDV could infect and replicate in cell lines of the mouse or other species in vitro when they were infected with MuLV. The significance of and the precise mechanism underlying this phenomenon, however, remain unclear. We demonstrated in this study the efficient infection and replication of the virus in vitro by inoculation of its RNA mixed with liposome. No significant difference either in the efficiency of RNA transfection or in the ability to support its replication was observed among the various species' cell lines examined. In addition, by RNA transfection the virus replicated with equal efficiency in MuLV-infected and -uninfected cells or in macrophages derived from mice irrespective of their age. In contrast, the pattern of the infection by virus particles was quite different; LDV replication was observed only in macrophages (particularly from newborn mice) and MuLV-infected cells. By using various LDV isolates, it was demonstrated that the capability of replication between neurovirulent, LDV type C, and the other avirulent strains was almost the same in mouse cell lines when their RNA was introduced into the cells. Higher infectivity of LDV-C to MuLV-infected cells may be due to its efficient incorporation of the particles into MuLV-infected cells.

Documentos Relacionados