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J. Virol., 10 1996, 6709-6715, Vol 70, No. 10
B Sherry, CJ Baty and MA Blum
The capacity for different reovirus reassortant viruses to induce acute
myocarditis in mice correlates with cytopathogenic effect in primary
cultures of murine cardiac myocytes. Multiple viral genes encoding proteins
involved in viral RNA synthesis are determinants of this disease. We
therefore evaluated the role of viral RNA synthesis in induction of acute
myocarditis by infecting primary cultures of cardiac myocytes with a panel
of myocarditic and nonmyocarditic viruses and quantitating RNA synthesis.
RNA synthesis correlated with induction of myocarditis and with the S1 and
M1 reovirus genes. Since one consequence of viral RNA synthesis is
generation of infectious virus, we looked next at viral yield from cardiac
myocyte cultures. Yield of infectious virus at an early time postinfection
or as a final yield from primary infections did not correlate with
myocarditis, but instead both correlated with the S1 gene. The S1 gene also
determined the fraction of cells infected during primary infections in the
culture, which varied dramatically between viruses. Viral yields per
infected cell were similar for most myocarditic and nonmyocarditic
reoviruses and did not correlate with induction of myocarditis or any
reovirus gene. Together, the data provide two insights into
reovirus-induced acute myocarditis in mice. First, while the S1 gene. which
encodes the viral attachment protein sigma1 (as well as a nonstructural
protein, sigma1s, of unknown function) does not determine the myocarditic
potential of these viruses, it does determine the efficiency with which
they infect cardiac myocytes. Second, while viral RNA synthesis is a
determinant of acute myocarditis, this is not due to generation of
infectious virus. This finding suggests that some other consequence of
viral RNA synthesis, for example, induction of interferon, may determine
reovirus-induced acute myocarditis.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Reovirus-induced acute myocarditis in mice correlates with viral RNA synthesis rather than generation of infectious virus in cardiac myocytes
Department of Microbiology, Pathology, and Parasitology, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh 27606, USA.
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