Avian Reovirus Temperature-Sensitive Mutant tsA12 Has a Lesion in Major Core Protein σA and Is Defective in Assembly

Author:

Xu Wanhong1,Patrick Megan K.1,Hazelton Paul R.1,Coombs Kevin M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada

Abstract

ABSTRACT Members of our laboratory previously generated and described a set of avian reovirus (ARV) temperature-sensitive ( ts ) mutants and assigned 11 of them to 7 of the 10 expected recombination groups, named A through G (M. Patrick, R. Duncan, and K. M. Coombs, Virology 284: 113-122, 2001). This report presents a more detailed analysis of two of these mutants ( tsA12 and tsA146 ), which were previously assigned to recombination group A. The capacities of tsA12 and tsA146 to replicate at a variety of temperatures were determined. Morphological analyses indicated that cells infected with tsA12 at a nonpermissive temperature produced ∼100-fold fewer particles than cells infected at a permissive temperature and accumulated core particles. Cells infected with tsA146 at a nonpermissive temperature also produced ∼100-fold fewer particles, a larger proportion of which were intact virions. We crossed tsA12 with ARV strain 176 to generate reassortant clones and used them to map the temperature-sensitive lesion in tsA12 to the S2 gene. S2 encodes the major core protein σA. Sequence analysis of the tsA12 S2 gene showed a single alteration, a cytosine-to-uracil transition, at nucleotide position 488. This alteration leads to a predicted amino acid change from proline to leucine at amino acid position 158 in the σA protein. An analysis of the core crystal structure of the closely related mammalian reovirus suggested that the Leu 158 substitution in ARV σA lies directly under the outer face of the σA protein. This may cause a perturbation in σA such that outer capsid proteins are incapable of condensing onto nascent cores. Thus, the ARV tsA12 mutant represents a novel assembly-defective orthoreovirus clone that may prove useful for delineating virus assembly.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

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