Journal of Virology, November 2001, p. 10054-10064, Vol. 75, No. 21
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.21.10054-10064.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Institutes of Molecular Biology1 and Infectology,2 Friedrich-Loeffler-Institutes, Federal Research Centre for Virus Diseases of Animals, D-17498 Insel Riems, Germany
Received 21 May 2001/Accepted 8 August 2001
Infection of cells by herpesviruses is initiated by the interaction
of viral envelope glycoproteins with cellular receptors. In the
alphaherpesvirus pseudorabies virus (PrV), the causative agent of
Aujeszky's disease in pigs, the essential glycoprotein D (gD) mediates
secondary attachment of virions to target cells by binding to newly
identified cellular receptors (R. J. Geraghty, C. Krummenacher,
G. H. Cohen, R. J. Eisenberg, and P. G. Spear, Science
280:1618-1620, 1998). However, in the presence of compensatory mutations, infection can also occur in the absence of gD, as evidenced by the isolation in cell culture of an infectious gD-negative PrV
mutant (PrV-gD
Pass) (J. Schmidt, B. G. Klupp, A. Karger, and T. C. Mettenleiter, J. Virol. 71:17-24, 1997).
PrV-gD
Pass is replication competent with an only
moderate reduction in specific infectivity but appears to bind to
receptors different from those recognized by wild-type PrV (A. Karger,
J. Schmidt, and T. C. Mettenleiter, J. Virol. 72:7341-7348,
1998). To analyze whether this alteration in receptor usage in vitro
influences infection in vivo, the model host mouse and the natural host
pig were intranasally infected with PrV-gD
Pass and were
compared to animals infected by wild-type PrV. For mice, a comparable
progress of disease was observed, and all animals infected with mutant
virus died, although they exhibited a slight delay in the onset of
symptoms and, correspondingly, a longer time to death. In contrast,
whereas wild-type PrV-infected pigs showed clinical signs and
histological and histopathological findings typical of PrV infection,
no signs of disease were observed after infection with
PrV-gD
Pass. Moreover, in these animals, virus-infected
cells were not detectable by immunohistochemical staining of different
organ samples and no virus could be isolated from nasal swabs.
Mutations in glycoproteins B and H were found to correlate with, and
probably contribute to, gD-independent infectivity. In conclusion,
although PrV-gD
Pass is virulent in mice, it is
apparently unable to infect the natural host, the pig. This altered
host range in vivo correlates with a difference of receptor usage in
vitro and demonstrates for the first time the importance of gD
receptors in alphaherpesvirus infection of an animal host.
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