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J. Virol., Jul 1997, 4929-4937, Vol 71, No. 7
W Maury, S Perryman, JL Oaks, BK Seid, T Crawford, T McGuire and S Carpenter
The role of in vivo long terminal repeat (LTR) sequence variation of the
lentivirus equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) has not been explored. In
this study, we investigated the heterogeneity found in the LTR sequences
from seven EIAV-seropositive horses: three horses with clinical disease and
four horses without any detectable signs of disease. LTR sequences were
targeted in this study because the LTR U3 enhancer region of tissue
culture-derived isolates has been identified as one of the few
hypervariable regions of the EIAV genome. Furthermore, LTR variation may
regulate EIAV expression in vivo. Both intra- and interanimal sequence
variations were investigated. The intra- animal variation was low in
seropositive, healthy horses (on average 0.44%). Intra-animal variation was
consistently higher in clinically ill horses (0.99%), suggesting that
greater numbers of quasispecies of EIAV are present when active virus
replication is ongoing. Interanimal comparisons of consensus sequences
generated from each horse demonstrated that the enhancer region is a
hotspot of sequence variation in vivo. Thirty-seven of the 83 nucleotides
that compose the U3 enhancer region were variable between the different in
vivo-derived LTRs. The remainder of the LTR that was analyzed was more
conserved, 8 of 195 nucleotide positions being variable. Results of
electrophoretic mobility shift assays demonstrated that some nucleotide
substitutions that occurred in the enhancer region eliminated or altered
transcription factor binding motifs that are known to be important for EIAV
LTR expression. These data suggested that the selective pressures exerted
on the EIAV LTR enhancer sequences are different from those exerted on the
remainder of the LTR. Our findings are consistent with the possibility that
enhancer sequence hypervariability can alter expression of the virus in
tissue macrophages and therefore contribute to clinical disease in infected
horses.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Localized sequence heterogeneity in the long terminal repeats of in vivo isolates of equine infectious anemia virus
Department of Microbiology, University of South Dakota, Vermillion 57069, USA. wmaury@charlie.usd.edu
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