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Differentiation of Oncogenic and Nononcogenic Strains of Marek's Disease Virus Type 1 by Using Polymerase Chain Reaction DNA Amplification
43
Citations
23
References
1992
Year
Viral ReplicationNononcogenic StrainsViral DiagnosticsGeneticsPathogenesisDna ReplicationVirologyPathologyMolecular GeneticsMicrobiologyPcr ProcedureMedicineViral OncologyVirus GeneMdv1 DnaViral GeneticsLong Inverted Repeats
Differentiation of oncogenic and nononcogenic strains of Marek's disease virus type 1 (MDV1) was attempted by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using the primers chosen from the sequence within the long inverted repeats of MDV1 DNA. PCR of the DNAs extracted from oncogenic-strain-infected cells and Marek's disease tumor cell lines produced a major product containing two or three copies of 132-base-pair (bp) repeat units, whereas PCRs of the DNAs extracted from nononcogenic-strain-infected cells yielded amplified products with various sizes corresponding to the number of 132-bp repeat units. The primers chosen from the glycoprotein A genes of MDV1 and herpesvirus of turkeys also were used for determination of their serotype specificity. The PCR procedure was found to be a simple and sensitive procedure for identification of MDV1 and herpesvirus of turkeys and for estimation of oncogenicity of MDV1.
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