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J. Virol., Jul 1996, 4394-4410, Vol 70, No. 7
K Mossman, SF Lee, M Barry, L Boshkov and G McFadden
Myxoma virus is a pathogenic poxvirus that induces a lethal myxomatosis
disease profile in European rabbits, which is characterized by fulminating
lesions at the primary site of inoculation, rapid dissemination to
secondary internal organs and peripheral external sites, and supervening
gram-negative bacterial infection. Here we describe the role of a novel
myxoma virus protein encoded by the M-T5 open reading frame during
pathogenesis. The myxoma virus M-T5 protein possesses no significant
sequence homology to nonviral proteins but is a member of a larger poxviral
superfamily designated host range proteins. An M-T5- mutant virus was
constructed by disruption of both copies of the M-T5 gene followed by
insertion of the selectable marker p7.5Ecogpt. Although the M-T5- deletion
mutant replicated with wild- type kinetics in rabbit fibroblasts, infection
of a rabbit CD4+ T-cell line (RL5) with the myxoma virus M-T5- mutant virus
resulted in the rapid and complete cessation of both host and viral protein
synthesis, accompanied by the manifestation of all the classical features
of programmed cell death. Infection of primary rabbit peripheral
mononuclear cells with the myxoma virus M-T5-mutant virus resulted in the
apoptotic death of nonadherent lymphocytes but not adherent monocytes.
Within the European rabbit, disruption of the M-T5 open reading frame
caused a dramatic attenuation of the rapidly lethal myxomatosis infection,
and none of the infected rabbits displayed any of the characteristic
features of myxomatosis. The two most significant histological observations
in rabbits infected with the M-T5-mutant virus were (i) the lack of
progression of the infection past the primary site of inoculation, coupled
with the establishment of a rapid and effective inflammatory reaction, and
(ii) the inability of the virus to initiate a cellular reaction within
secondary immune organs. We conclude that M-T5 functions as a critical
virulence factor by allowing productive infection of immune cells such as
peripheral lymphocytes, thus facilitating virus dissemination to secondary
tissue sites via the lymphatic channels.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Disruption of M-T5, a novel myxoma virus gene member of poxvirus host range superfamily, results in dramatic attenuation of myxomatosis in infected European rabbits
Department of Biochemistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
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