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1.
Virus Genes ; 30(3): 307-22, 2005 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15830148

ABSTRACT

The family Herpesviridae comprises at least 100 herpesviruses. Numerous human and animal pathogenic herpesviruses have been identified so far, including Cercopithecine herpesvirus 1 (CeHV-1). This virus is a member of the subfamily Alphaherpesvirinae and is the most hazardous herpesvirus to man. CeHV-1 is also known as B-virus or monkey B virus and as Herpesvirus simiae. In order to gain more genetic information, the viral DNA polymerase (DPOL) gene was identified using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and DNA nucleotide sequence analysis. The deduced amino acid sequence contains the motifs and signatures that are typical for the B-family of DPOLs. The DPOL gene of CeHV-1 was found to be a suitable target for the specific and rapid identification of the Cercopithecine herpesvirus 1 infection by PCR technology. Comparative analysis of the DNA sequences of the DPOL gene loci of CeHV-1, Human herpesvirus 1 and 2 (HHV-1 and HHV-2), and other herpesviruses was carried out for determination of unique genomic regions of the individual DPOL genes. A primer set of 12 primers was used for screening the DNA of CeHV-1, HHV-1, and HHV-2 by detailed PCR. It was found that six out of twelve primer combinations are able to detect specifically the CeHV-1 genome without cross reactivity with the genome of HHV-1 and/or HHV-2. The specificity of the individual amplified DNA fragments was confirmed by DNA nucleotide sequence analysis. The results of these studies indicate that the six primer combinations of the specific CeHV-1 DPOL primer set is the method of choice for a rapid, precise and specific identification of a CeHV-1 infection by PCR. Due to the fact that this specific CeHV-1 DPOL primer set does not amplify any DNAs of HHV-1 or HHV-2 genome this technology is stressing and can be successfully used unlimited and more credible in all laboratories with PCR technical facility routinely for detection of a CeHV-1 infection in vivo or in vitro.


Subject(s)
DNA, Viral/analysis , DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase/genetics , Herpesviridae Infections/diagnosis , Herpesvirus 1, Cercopithecine/genetics , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Viral Proteins/genetics , Amino Acid Motifs/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , DNA Primers , DNA, Viral/chemistry , Herpesvirus 1, Human/genetics , Herpesvirus 2, Human/genetics , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , Sensitivity and Specificity , Sequence Alignment , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
2.
Virus Genes ; 30(2): 157-80, 2005 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15744574

ABSTRACT

In the last decades a significant number of so far unknown or underestimated pathogens have emerged as fundamental health hazards of the human population despite intensive research and exceptional efforts of modern medicine to embank and eradicate infectious diseases. Almost all incidents caused by such emerging pathogens could be ascribed to agents that are zoonotic or expanded their host range and crossed species barriers. Many different factors influence the status of a pathogen to remain unnoticed or evolves into a worldwide threat. The ability of an infectious agent to adapt to changing environmental conditions and variations in human behavior, population development, nutrition, education, social, and health status are relevant factors affecting the correlation between pathogen and host. Hantaviruses belong to the emerging pathogens having gained more and more attention in the last decades. These viruses are members of the family Bunyaviridae and are grouped into a separate genus known as Hantavirus. The serotypes Hantaan (HTN), Seoul (SEO), Puumala (PUU), and Dobrava (DOB) virus predominantly cause hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS), a disease characterized by renal failure, hemorrhages, and shock. In the recent past, many hantavirus isolates have been identified and classified in hitherto unaffected geographic regions in the New World (North, Middle, and South America) with characteristic features affecting the lungs of infected individuals and causing an acute pulmonary syndrome. Hantavirus outbreaks in the United States of America at the beginning of the 10th decade of the last century fundamentally changed our knowledge about the appearance of the hantavirus specific clinical picture, mortality, origin, and transmission route in human beings. The hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) was first recognized in 1993 in the Four Corners Region of the United States and had a lethality of more than 50%. Although the causative virus was first termed in connection with the geographic name of its outbreak region the analysis of the individual viruses indicate that the causing virus of HPS was a genetically distinct hantavirus and consequently termed as Sin Nombre virus. Hantaviruses are distributed worldwide and are assumed to share a long time period of co-evolution with specific rodent species as their natural reservoir. The degree of relatedness between virus serotypes normally coincides with the relatedness between their respective hosts. There are no known diseases that are associated with hantavirus infections in rodents underlining the amicable relationship between virus and host developed by mutual interaction in hundreds of thousands of years. Although rodents are the major reservoir, antibodies against hantaviruses are also present in domestic and wild animals like cats, dogs, pigs, cattle, and deer. Domestic animals and rodents live jointly in a similar habitat. Therefore the transmission of hantaviruses from rodents to domestic animals seems to be possible, if the target organs, tissues, and cell parenchyma of the co-habitat domestic animals possess adequate virus receptors and are suitable for hantavirus entry and replication. The most likely incidental infection of species other than rodents as for example humans turns hantaviruses from harmless to life-threatening pathogenic agents focusing the attention on this virus group, their ecology and evolution in order to prevent the human population from a serious health risk. Much more studies on the influence of non-natural hosts on the ecology of hantaviruses are needed to understand the directions that the hantavirus evolution could pursue. At least, domestic animals that share their environmental habitat with rodents and humans particularly in areas known as high endemic hantavirus regions have to be copiously screened. Each transfer of hantaviruses from their original natural hosts to other often incidental hosts is accompanied by a change of ecology, a change of environment, a modulation of numerous factors probably influencing the pathogenicity and virulence of the virus. The new environment exerts a modified evolutionary pressure on the virus forcing it to adapt and probably to adopt a form that is much more dangerous for other host species compared to the original one.


Subject(s)
Hantavirus Infections/transmission , Animals , Disease Outbreaks , Disease Reservoirs , Ecosystem , Orthohantavirus/classification , Orthohantavirus/isolation & purification , Orthohantavirus/pathogenicity , Hantavirus Infections/epidemiology , Hantavirus Infections/etiology , Hantavirus Infections/prevention & control , Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome/transmission , Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome/virology , Humans , Zoonoses/transmission , Zoonoses/virology
3.
Virus Genes ; 30(2): 279-96, 2005 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15744583

ABSTRACT

The objective of this study was to investigate the molecular mechanisms of neurobiological processes involved in the degeneration of the central nervous system. The bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) was used as experimental model system for investigation of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE). The experimental strategy was to evaluate the possibility for protection of bovine PrP(C) transgenic mice against a bovine PrP(Sc) infection by DNA vaccination using the complete or partial cDNA sequences of the bovine prion protein. Three recombinant plasmids pCR3.1-EX-PrP-BSE-C20 (C20), pCR3.1-EX-PrP-BSE-90-235-C4 (C4), and pCR3.1-EX-PrP-BSE-106-131-C14 (C14) were constructed. These mammalian expression vectors harbor complete (C20) or partial (C4 and C14) cDNA sequences of the Bos taurus PrP(C) (BTPrP(C)) encoding for amino acid residues 1-264 (C20), 90-235 (C4), and 106-131 (C14) of the BTPrP(C). Transgenic mice harboring and expressing BTPrP(C) were generated using the donor strain C57/CBA, receptor strain Swiss mouse, and recombinant plasmid MoPrPXho-boPrP. Crossing of positive transgenic mice to bovine PrP and negative to murine PrP with 129/OLA (murine PrP-/-) and C57BL6x129/OLA (murine PrP+/-) mice was carried out to amplify the colony of transgenic mice termed bovine PrP(C) transgenic Swiss mice (BTPrP-TgM). The capabilities of C20, C4, and C14 to express the corresponding cDNA sequence of BTPrP(C) in vitro and in vivo were confirmed prior to DNA vaccination of the BTPrP-TgM using NIH 3T3 cells and BALB/c mice, respectively. In order to prove the capability of the constructed expression vectors to protect BTPrP-TgM in vivo against a BSE infection 80 female BTPrP-TgM were vaccinated intramuscularly and subcutaneously with DNA of the plasmids C20, C4, C14, and parental vector pCR3.1 (100 microg DNA corresponding to about 26-30 pmol DNA/animal and application) in four groups (each consists of 20 animals). DNA vaccination was followed by three additional boosters. The vaccinated animals (15 animals of each group) were challenged twice per oral with homogenates of brain material obtained from BSE cattle containing the infectious PrP(Sc) (100 microl/animal which corresponds to 15 mg of a 15% brain homogenate). The first and second challenge experiments were performed 76-83 and 181 days post DNA vaccination, respectively. A part of the vaccinated animals (3-5 animals of each group) that served as internal negative control were mock infected using the brain homogenate of healthy cattle or Phosphate saline buffer (PBS). A variety of symptoms and clinical pictures were observed during the monitoring of DNA vaccinated animals. However, the observed diseases seem to be similar in all experimental animal groups. After an observation period of 14 months post the second challenge experiment the remaining animals (some animals died or were sacrificed when moribund during the study) were sacrificed after expiration of the experimental schedule. The right hemisphere of the brain and a half of the spleen tissue of the individual animals were used for detection of PrP(Sc) by Western blot analysis. The misfolded bovine PrP(Sc) was not detected in the brain or spleen tissues of those animals that were vaccinated with DNA of C20, which was able to express the complete bovine PrP(C) protein in vitro and in vivo. In contrast, the bovine PrP(Sc) was detected in the brain or spleen tissues of animals that were DNA vaccinated with DNA of the parental vector pCR3.1, with DNA of C4, or with DNA of C14. The results of these studies underline that the constructed expression vector C20 possesses the protective capacity to inhibit the formation of misfolded bovine PrP(Sc) in BTPrP-TgM under the conditions used. A delay of occurrence of TSE-specific symptoms in the majority of the vaccinated animals seems to be due to the prolonged incubation time of BSE infection.


Subject(s)
PrPC Proteins/genetics , PrPC Proteins/immunology , PrPSc Proteins/pathogenicity , Prion Diseases/prevention & control , Vaccines, DNA/genetics , Vaccines, DNA/pharmacology , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Base Sequence , Cattle , DNA, Complementary/genetics , Female , Gene Expression , Genetic Vectors , In Vitro Techniques , Mice , Mice, Inbred BALB C , Mice, Transgenic , Molecular Sequence Data , NIH 3T3 Cells , Plasmids/genetics , Prion Diseases/genetics , Prion Diseases/immunology
4.
Virus Genes ; 27(1): 29-48, 2003 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12913356

ABSTRACT

Adenoviruses are globally spread and infect species in all five taxons of vertebrates. Outstanding attention is focused on adenoviruses because of their transformation potential, their possible usability as vectors in gene therapy and their applicability in studies dealing with, e.g. cell cycle control, DNA replication, transcription, splicing, virus-host interactions, apoptosis, and viral evolution. The accumulation of genetic data provides the basis for the increase of our knowledge about adenoviruses. The Tupaia adenovirus (TAV) infects members of the genus Tupaiidae that are frequently used as laboratory animals in behavior research dealing with questions about biological and molecular processes of stress in mammals, in neurobiological and physiological studies, and as model organisms for human hepatitis B and C virus infections. In the present study the TAV genome underwent an extensive analysis including determination of codon usage, CG depletion, gene content, gene arrangement, potential splice sites, and phylogeny. The TAV genome has a length of 33,501 bp with a G+C content of 49.96%. The genome termini show a strong CG depletion that could be due to methylation of these genome regions during the viral replication cycle. The analysis of the coding capacity of the complete TAV genome resulted in the identification of 109 open reading frames (ORFs), of which 38 were predicted to be real viral genes. TAV was classified within the genus Mastadenovirus characterized by typical gene content, arrangement, and homology values of 29 conserved ORFs. Phylogenetic trees show that TAV is part of a separate evolutionary lineage and no mastadenovirus species can be considered as the most related. In contrast to other mastadenoviruses a direct ancestor of TAV captured a DUT gene from its mammalian host, presumably controlling local dUTP levels during replication and enhance viral replication in non-dividing host tissues. Furthermore, TAV possesses a second DNA-binding protein gene, that is likely to play a role in the determination of the host range. In view of these data it is conceivable that TAV underwent evolutionary adaptations to its biological environment resulting in the formation of special genomic components that provided TAV with the ability to expand its host range during viral evolution.


Subject(s)
Adenoviridae Infections/veterinary , Evolution, Molecular , Mastadenovirus/classification , Phylogeny , Tupaia/virology , Viral Proteins/genetics , Adenoviridae Infections/virology , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Genome, Viral , Humans , Mastadenovirus/genetics , Mastadenovirus/isolation & purification , Molecular Sequence Data , Open Reading Frames , Sequence Analysis, DNA
5.
J Virol ; 77(7): 4345-56, 2003 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12634391

ABSTRACT

The members of the family Adenoviridae are widely spread among vertebrate host species and normally cause acute but innocuous infections. Special attention is focused on adenoviruses because of their ability to transform host cells, their possible application in vector technology, and their phylogeny. The primary structure of the genome of Tupaia adenovirus (TAV), which infects Tupaia spp. (tree shrew) was determined. Tree shrews are taxonomically assumed to be at the base of the phylogenetic tree of mammals and are frequently used as laboratory animals in neurological and behavior research. The TAV genome is 33,501 bp in length with a G+C content of 49.96% and has 166-bp inverted terminal repeats. Analysis of the complete nucleotide sequence resulted in the identification of 109 open reading frames (ORFs) with a coding capacity of at least 40 amino acid residues. Thirty-eight of them are predicted to encode viral proteins based on the presence of transcription and translation signals and sequence and positional conservation. Thirty viral ORFs were found to show significant similarities to known adenoviral genes, arranged into discrete early and late genome regions as they are known from mastadenoviruses. Analysis of the nucleotide content of the TAV genome revealed a significant CG dinucleotide depletion at the genome ends that suggests methylation of these genomic regions during the viral life cycle. Phylogenetic analysis of the viral gene products, including penton and hexon proteins, viral protease, terminal protein, protein VIII, DNA polymerase, protein IVa2, and 100,000-molecular-weight protein, revealed that the evolutionary lineage of TAV forms a separate branch within the phylogenetic tree of the Mastadenovirus genus.


Subject(s)
Adenoviridae/genetics , Genome, Viral , Tupaia/virology , Adenoviridae/classification , Animals , Base Composition , DNA, Viral/chemistry , DNA, Viral/genetics , Open Reading Frames , Phylogeny , Viral Proteins/genetics
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