Principles of Virology. Jane Flint

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Principles of Virology - Jane Flint

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virus in cells in culture, by fixing of deletion mutations that complemented one another. Next, coinfection of this segmented flavivirus with another unidentified virus could have produced the precursor of Jingmen tick virus.

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      RNA genome of JMTV virus. The viral genome comprises four segments of single-stranded, (+) sense RNA. Proteins encoded by each RNA are indicated. RNA segments 1 and 3 encode flavivirus-like proteins.

      The results provide new clues about the origins of segmented RNA viruses.

       Moreno E, Ojosnegros S, García-Arriaza J, Escarmís C, Domingo E, Perales C. 2014. Exploration of sequence space as the basis of viral RNA genome segmentation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 111:6678–6683.

       Qin XC, Shi M, Tian JH, Lin XD, Gao DY, He JR, Wang JB, Li CX, Kang YJ, Yu B, Zhou DJ, Xu J, Plyusnin A, Holmes EC, Zhang YZ. 2014. A tick-borne segmented RNA virus contains genome segments derived from unsegmented viral ancestors. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 111:6744–6749.

       Mapping Mutations

      Before the advent of recombinant DNA technology, it was extremely difficult for investigators to determine the locations of mutations in viral genomes. The marker rescue technique (described in “Introducing Mutations into the Viral Genome” below) was a solution to this problem, but before it was developed, other, less satisfactory approaches were exploited.

       Functional Analysis

      Complementation describes the ability of gene products from two different mutant viruses to interact functionally in the same cell, permitting viral reproduction. It can be distinguished from recombination or reassortment by examining the progeny produced by coinfected cells. True complementation yields only the two parental mutants, while wild-type genomes result from recombination or reassortment. If the mutations being tested are in separate genes, each virus is able to supply a functional gene product, allowing both viruses to be reproduced. If the two viruses carry mutations in the same gene, no reproduction will occur. In this way, the members of collections of mutants obtained by chemical mutagenesis were initially organized into complementation groups defining separate viral functions. In principle, there can be as many complementation groups as genes.

      METHODS

       Spontaneous and induced mutations

      In the early days of experimental virology, mutant viruses could be isolated only by screening stocks for interesting phenotypes, for none of the tools that we now take for granted, such as restriction endonucleases, efficient DNA sequencing methods, and molecular cloning procedures, were developed until the mid to late 1970s. RNA virus stocks usually contain a high proportion of mutants, and it is only a matter of devising the appropriate selection conditions (e.g., high or low temperature or exposure to drugs that inhibit viral reproduction) to select mutants with the desired phenotype from the total population. For example, the live attenuated poliovirus vaccine strains developed by Albert Sabin are mutants that were selected from a virulent virus stock (Volume II, Fig. 7.11).

      The low spontaneous mutation rate of DNA viruses necessitated random mutagenesis by exposure to a chemical mutagen. Mutagens such as nitrous acid, hydroxylamine, and alkylating agents chemically modify the nucleic acid in preparations of virus particles, resulting in changes in base-pairing during subsequent genome replication. Base analogs, intercalating agents, or UV light are applied to the infected cell to cause changes in the viral genome during replication. Such agents introduce mutations more or less at random. Some mutations are lethal under all conditions, while others have no effect and are said to be silent.

      To facilitate identification of mutants, the population must be screened for a phenotype that can be identified easily in a plaque assay. One such phenotype is temperature-sensitive viability of the virus. Virus mutants with this phenotype reproduce well at low temperatures, but poorly or not at all at high temperatures. The permissive and nonpermissive temperatures are typically 33 and 39°C, respectively, for viruses that replicate in mammalian cells. Other commonly sought phenotypes are changes in plaque size or morphology, drug resistance, antibody resistance, and host range (that is, loss of the ability to reproduce in certain hosts or host cells).

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      TERMINOLOGY

       What is wild type?

      Terminology can be confusing. Virologists often use terms such as “strains,” “variants,” and “mutants” to designate a virus that differs in some heritable way from a parental or wild-type virus. In conventional usage, the wild type is defined as the original (often laboratory-adapted) virus from which mutants are selected and which is used as the basis for comparison. A wild-type virus may not be identical to a virus isolated from nature. In fact, the genome of a wild-type virus may include numerous mutations accumulated during propagation in the laboratory. For example, the genome of the first isolate of poliovirus obtained in 1909 undoubtedly is very different from that of the virus we call wild type today. We distinguish carefully between laboratory wild types and new virus isolates from the natural host. The latter are called field isolates or clinical isolates.

      The field of viral taxonomy has its own naming conventions which can cause some confusion. Viruses are classified into orders, families, subfamilies, genera, and species. These names are always italicized and start with a capital letter (e.g., Picornaviridae). To ensure clarity, the names of viruses (like poliovirus) should be written differently from the names

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