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J Virol, August 1998, p. 6742-6751, Vol. 72, No. 8
Institute for Animal Health, Compton
Laboratory, Newbury, Berkshire RG20 7NN, United Kingdom
Received 2 February 1998/Accepted 18 May 1998
The genome of fowlpox virus (FWPV), type species of the
Avipoxviridae, is considerably rearranged compared with
that of vaccinia virus (the prototypic poxvirus and type species of the
Orthopoxviridae) and is 30% larger. It is likely that the
genome of FWPV contains genes in addition to those found in vaccinia
virus, probably involved with its replication and survival in the
chicken. A 7,470-bp segment of the FWPV genome has five open reading
frames (ORFs), two of which encode ankyrin repeat proteins, many
examples of which have been found in poxviruses. The remaining ORFs
encode homologs of cellular genes not reported in any other virus.
ORF-2 encodes a homolog of the yeast Sec17p and mammalian SNAP
proteins, crucial to vesicular transport in the exocytic pathway. ORF-3
encodes a homolog of an orphan human protein, R31240_2, encoded on
19p13.2. ORF-3 is also homologous to three proteins (YLS2, YMV6, and
C07B5.5) from the free-living nematode Caenorhabditis
elegans and to a 43-kDa antigen from the parasitic nematode
Trichinella spiralis. ORF-5 encodes a homolog of the
mammalian plasma cell antigen PC-1, a type II glycoprotein with
exophosphodiesterase activity. The ORFs are present in the virulent
precursor, HP1, of the sequenced attenuated virus (FP9) and are
conserved in other strains of FWPV. They were shown, by deletion
mutagenesis, to be nonessential to virus replication in tissue culture.
RNA encoding the viral homolog of PC-1 is expressed strongly early and
late in infection, but RNAs encoding the homologs of SNAP and R31240_2
are expressed weakly and late.
0022-538X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Fowlpox Virus Encodes Nonessential Homologs of
Cellular Alpha-SNAP, PC-1, and an Orphan Human Homolog of a
Secreted Nematode Protein
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute
for Animal Health, Compton Laboratory, Nr. Newbury, Berks. RG20
7NN, United Kingdom. Phone: (1635) 577270. Fax: (1635) 577263. E-mail: michael.skinner{at}bbsrc.ac.uk.
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