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Long-Term Persistent Vesicular Stomatitis Virus and Rabies Virus Infection of Cells In Vitro

99

Citations

30

References

1976

Year

Abstract

SUMMARY BHK 21 carrier cells persistently infected with VSV Indiana for over 2 years have been shedding generally very low levels of mature infectious virus or mature T particles (averaging less than one-hundredth p.f.u./cell/day) yet most cells are producing virus antigens and are resistant to homologous superinfection. However, large amounts of biologically active T particle RNP can be recovered from cytoplasmic extracts of these carrier cells even at times when they are shedding no detectable infectious virus. This recovered cytoplasmic RNP replicates (with helper B virions) to produce mature T particles, interferes strongly after DEAE dextranfacilitated uptake and, together with B virions, allows the establishment of a persistent carrier state in exposed cells. No ‘provirus’ DNA copies of the VSV RNA genome are detectable (less than 1/40 copy/cell or 1 copy per 40 cells) in carrier cells after more than 2 years of persistent infection, and all transfection attempts have failed using DNA from these VSV carriers or DNA from carrier cells persistently infected with some other negative strand RNA viruses (measles, mumps, LCM, influenza, rabies). Infectious viruses shed after more than 1 year from carrier cells originally infected with wild-type B virions are small plaque mutants showing a slight temperature sensitivity. Cured cell populations can be obtained from the long term VSV carrier culture by cloning in the presence or absence of antiviral antibody.

References

YearCitations

1970

710

1971

576

1969

402

1969

346

1970

219

1963

152

1974

145

1975

130

1975

124

1975

121

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