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Journal of Virology, March 2004, p. 2502-2509, Vol. 78, No. 5
0022-538X/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.78.5.2502-2509.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Absence of Replication-Competent Human-Tropic Porcine Endogenous Retroviruses in the Germ Line DNA of Inbred Miniature Swine
Linda Scobie,1* Samantha Taylor,1 James C. Wood,2 Kristen M. Suling,2 Gary Quinn,2 Sharon Meikle,1 Clive Patience,2 Henk-Jan Schuurman,2 and David E. Onions1
Department of Veterinary Pathology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G61 1QH, United Kingdom,1
Immerge BioTherapeutics Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts 021392
Received 21 August 2003/
Accepted 29 October 2003

ABSTRACT
The potential transmission of porcine endogenous retroviruses
(PERVs) has raised concern in the development of porcine xenotransplantation
products. Our previous studies have resulted in the identification
of animals within a research herd of inbred miniature swine
that lack the capacity to transmit PERV to human cells in vitro.
In contrast, other animals were capable of PERV transmission.
The PERVs that were transmitted to human cells are recombinants
between PERV-A and PERV-C in the post-VRA region of the envelope
(B. A. Oldmixon, J. C. Wood, T. A. Ericsson, C. A. Wilson, M.
E. White-Scharf, G. Andersson, J. L. Greenstein, H. J. Schuurman,
and C. Patience, J. Virol.
76:3045-3048, 2002); these viruses
we term PERV-A/C. This observation prompted us to determine
whether these human-tropic replication-competent (HTRC) PERV-A/C
recombinants were present in the genomic DNA of these miniature
swine. Genomic DNA libraries were generated from one miniature
swine that transmitted HTRC PERV as well as from one miniature
swine that did not transmit HTRC PERV. HTRC PERV-A/C proviruses
were not identified in the germ line DNAs of these pigs by using
genomic mapping. Similarly, although PERV-A loci were identified
in both libraries that possessed long
env open reading frames,
the Env proteins encoded by these loci were nonfunctional according
to pseudotype assays. In the absence of a germ line source for
HTRC PERV, further studies are warranted to assess the mechanisms
by which HTRC PERV can be generated. Once identified, it may
prove possible to generate animals with further reduced potential
to produce HTRC PERV.

INTRODUCTION
Xenotransplantation carries the concerns of cross-species transmission
of infectious pathogens present in the donor species (
7,
17,
18,
23). Studies indicate that many exogenous microorganisms
can be eliminated from the donor herd by using various barrier
methods and specialized qualified-pathogen-free rearing techniques
(
3,
25,
26). However, porcine endogenous retroviruses (PERVs)
are an exception to this rule, as proviral copies are inherited
through the germ line DNA. Three subgroups of PERV, PERV-A,
-B, and -C, have been identified (
24). Either PERV-A, PERV-B,
or viruses derived from recombination events between PERV-A
and PERV-C, are able to result in productive infection of human
cells in vitro, such as the kidney epithelial 293 cell line
(
1,
10,
12-
14,
16,
21,
24,
27). All three PERV subgroups can
replicate in porcine cell lines (
21,
24). Although in vitro
transmission characteristics indicate a potential for in vivo
transmission, infection by PERV of humans exposed to living
porcine tissue has not been reported thus far (
5,
6,
8,
19,
20,
22).
Genomic mapping studies have been used to investigate the distribution of the three subgroups of PERV in the genomic DNA of pigs. PERV-A and PERV-B loci have been identified in the germ line DNA of all pigs tested to date (11). Generally, PERV-A loci are present at a higher copy number than the PERV-B subgroup. In most pig breeds, the PERV-C subgroup either is absent or is represented by only a limited number of elements. In contrast, the copy number of PERV-C can be elevated in miniature swine (MS) (2, 21). Previous mapping data have shown that the majority of PERVs in the genome are defective due to mutations in their coding sequences (9, 15). Interestingly, those PERVs that are clearly replication competent have been isolated from the genomic DNAs of immortalized pig cell lines (10). In contrast, those clones isolated from primary pig cells have been of weak competence (15). However, because the transmission phenotype of the cells from which these mapping studies were produced is unknown, it is not possible to determine which, if any, loci are expressed and, moreover, whether these viruses can be transmitted.
In vitro transmission studies of an inbred herd of MS have identified animals that reproducibly do not transmit PERV to human cells (16). The identification of animals within the highly inbred MS herd that lack human-tropic replication-competent (HTRC) PERV (16) may circumvent the need for strategies such as specific breeding or gene targeting to remove HTRC PERV from the herd, which might be required in other outbred breeds of pig. On all occasions when HTRC PERV was transmitted to human cells, the viruses were recombinants between the PERV-A and PERV-C subgroups with recombination in the post-VRA region of the env gene (16), indicating that recombination may play a vital role in the generation of HTRC PERV. Accordingly, for analysis of the PERV burden of the genomic DNA of pigs to be complete, genomic mapping must identify (i) all HTRC PERVs in the genome that possess independent replication competence; (ii) long replication-defective PERV-A loci, i.e., those loci that contain an env open reading frame (ORF) beyond the VRA region, which might contribute toward the production of HTRC PERV via recombination; and (iii) transcriptionally silent but potentially replication-competent proviruses that might become activated and infect human cells. Genomic mapping of PERV loci can be used to achieve these goals.
In this study we investigated MS with known in vitro transmission phenotypes. Genomic libraries were constructed from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of two SLAd/d inbred MS (16); one of these (MS 13519) was capable of transmitting HTRC PERV-A/C recombinants to 293 cells in vitro, whereas MS 11852 lacked transmissible HTRC PERV and infected only the porcine cell line ST-IOWA. Study of these animals facilitates direct comparison of in vitro transmission data with genomic mapping data. We did not detect HTRC PERV in either of these libraries, which is indicative of the absence of HTRC PERV in the germ line DNA of MS. In addition, taken together with the data presented by Wood et al. (28), our data challenge the assumption that the most significant source of HTRC PERV is directly from intact germ line proviruses.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Genomic library screening.
Lambda libraries were constructed from the PBMC of SLA
d/d MS
that had been classified as either a nontransmitter of HTRC
PERV (MS 11852) (designated HTRC-NT) or a transmitter of HTRC
PERV (MS 13519) (designated HTRC-T) (
16). The library for MS
11852 was constructed from DNA partially digested with
Sau3A1
and ligated into
XhoI-digested lambda GEM-12 (Promega, Southampton,
United Kingdom) that had been partially filled with Klenow and
T and C deoxynucleotides to create an
Sau3A1-compatible end.
Titers of the library were determined in KW251 cells (Promega).
For MS 13519, the library was prepared from DNA partially digested
with
MboI and ligated to
BamHI-digested lambda DASH II vector
(CMT Inc., Phillipsburg, N.J.), and titers were determined in
P2 (MRA) cells (CMT Inc.). Neither library was amplified prior
to use. For each library, a total of 1.5
x 10
6 PFU was plated
on NZY agar plates. Duplicate filters were lifted by using Hybond
NX (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Little Chalfont, Bucks, United
Kingdom) and denatured and neutralized as described previously
(
9). Filters were UV-cross-linked and prehybridized for 30 min
in Quickhyb solution (Stratagene, Amsterdam, The Netherlands).
For
gag screening, the probes and reagents used were as described
by us previously (
9). For
env screening, a PERV-A-specific
env probe was derived by using a nested set of primers specific
to the variable region of the PERV-A envelope sequence. Primary
PCR was performed on PK-15 cDNA by using conserved primers pCENV1
(5'-ACCAACGGCTGTGAAAGTCGAAG-3') and pCENV2 (5'-AAGTACCATGATCTGGACTGCAC-3').
Secondary amplifications were carried out with specific primers
PV4USU (5'-GGAGATGGAAAGATTGGCAACAG-3') and PV4DSU (5'-CAGAGGTTGTATTGTAATCAGAG-3').
Products were purified, cloned into the vector pGEM-2T (Promega),
and verified by restriction digestion and sequencing. An internal
334-bp insert was released by a
SpeI-
SacII digest and used as
the PERV-A specific probe. Probes were labeled with [

-
32P]dCTP
by using Prime-it II (Stratagene). The library filters were
hybridized and washed as described previously (
9), exposed to
X-ray film at -70°C for up to a week, and developed by using
a Compact
x4 automatic film processor (X-ograph Imaging Systems,
Gloucester, United Kingdom).
Clones that gave positive hybridizations on both the gag and env filters were then purified to homogeneity through multiple rounds of rescreening. Lambda DNA was prepared from liquid lysates of these clones by standard methodologies.
Analysis of proviral clones for ORFs.
To determine the lengths of the env genes of the lambda clones, genomic DNA was prepared from all gag- and env-positive lambda clones and analyzed by using PCR primer pairs external to the original env probe region. These primers (cenv-3 [5'-GGTTATAACAGGTGGTGGGCATG-3'] and cenv-4 [5'-CCAAGGAGACCTGTTGAACCGTC-3']), which are conserved between all three subtypes of PERV, amplify a portion of the env gene and span the junction between the surface envelope (SU) and transmembrane (TM) protein-coding regions of env. PCRs were initiated by using the PCR core kit (Qiagen, Sussex, United Kingdom) with 50-µl mixtures containing 1.5 mM MgCl2, 1 U of Taq polymerase (Qiagen), and 200 ng of lambda DNA; reactions were cycled in an ABI9700 instrument (Perkin-Elmer Biosystems, Warrington, United Kingdom) at 94°C for 1 min 30 s followed by 35 cycles of 94°C for 15 s, 65°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 1 min and then followed by 72°C for 7 min, to yield a product of approximately 588 bp. Primers were used at a concentration of 10 pmol per reaction mixture.
Protein truncation test (PTT) PCR screening for gag and env ORFs was carried out as described previously on all clones that possessed long env genes (9). PCR products from clones that tested positive for full-length gag and env ORFs were cloned into the pCR2.1-Topo vector (Invitrogen, Paisley, United Kingdom). A minimum of two products for each clone were sequenced by ABI PRISM Dye terminator cycle sequencing on an ABI373 automated sequencer (Applied Biosystems, Warrington, United Kingdom). DNAs from all lambda clones that maintained full-length gag and env genes were digested with either SmaI or EcoRI in order to determine whether the clones isolated were unique.
Analysis of replication-defective PERV loci.
Lambda clones that tested negative by env PTT PCR but positive by gag PTT PCR were designated defective. To determine whether the negative env PCR was due to disrupted ORFs and not due to the presence of recombinant sequence not being amplified because of our primer selection, clones testing positive for env sequences according to PCR with the primers cenv3 and cenv4 but negative by env PTT PCR were amplified by long terminal repeat-long terminal repeat PCR as described previously (16), and the env region was sequenced.
Detection of PERV-A/C env recombinants by PCR.
Genomic DNAs were prepared from the PBMC of MS 11852 and MS 13519, and 293 cells were infected by a PERV-A/C recombinant and control plasmids containing PERV-A, -B, or -C env sequences. The DNAs were analyzed by using PCR primers specific to PERV-A/C env recombinant sequences. The primers A-VRA (forward) (5'-CCTACCAGTTATAATCAATTTAATTATGGC-3') and C-TM (reverse) (5'-CTCAAACCACCCTTGAGTAGTTTCC-3') were used to amplify sequences from 100 ng of genomic DNA in 50-µl reaction mixtures containing 25 pmol of primers in PCR master mix (Qiagen) with the following cycling parameters: 1 cycle of 94°C for 5 min; 35 cycles of 94°C for 10 s, 60°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 90 s; and 1 cycle of 72°C for 10 min.
Analysis of competence of PERV clones and Env proteins in vitro.
Transfection of lambda DNA was used to assess the replication competence of PERV loci, using techniques described by others (15). Briefly, 10 µg of DNA was prepared from clones by the liquid lysate method and transfected into the 293 human and the ST-IOWA porcine cell lines by using Lipofectamine Plus in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions (Invitrogen). As an internal control for transfection efficiency, each transfection also contained a 10-ng spike of the expression plasmid pEGFP-N1 (BD Biosciences Clontech, Palo Alto, Calif.), and transfected cells were examined after 48 h of culture by fluorescence microscopy. Cultures were maintained for up to 60 days and monitored for reverse transcriptase (RT) activity by using a sensitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay-based system (HS-Mn2+ kit; Cavidi Tech AB, Uppsala, Sweden) as described previously (15, 16). PERV-A60 DNA (1) was used as a positive control in the transfection assays.
Expression vectors were used to assess the competence of the Env proteins putatively encoded by the PERV-A proviral loci. Amplification of the env sequences from library clone DNA was carried out in 50-µl reaction mixtures containing 50 mM KCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.3), 1.5 mM MgCl2, a 150 nM concentration of each primer, a 200 nM concentration of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate, 2.5 U of Amplitaq (Perkin-Elmer Biosystems), 200 ng of lambda DNA, and the primers env F (5'-GGATCCTAATACGACTCACTATAGGAACAGACCACCATGCATCCCACGTTAAGCCG-3') and env R (5'-GCTCTAGACTAAGCGTAGTCTGGGACGTCGTATGGGTAGAACTGGGAAGGGTAGAGGTCAGT-3') and were cycled as follows: 1 cycle of 95°C for 3 min; 30 cycles of 94°C for 1 min, 62°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 2 min 10 s); and 10 min at 72°C. The primers used were previously described by us (9); the T7 RNA polymerase promoter sequence is incorporated in the sense primer, and the antisense primer is modified to contain an in-frame hemagglutinin epitope tag as utilized in the PTT assay (9). The PCR products were cloned into the pCR2.1-Topo cloning vector (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The PERV-A envelope sequences were excised from the pCR2.1-Topo vector by digestion with SpeI and XbaI and subcloned into the expression vectors pCR3.1 (Invitrogen) and pCIneo at the XbaI site. The correct orientation of the env sequences was confirmed by digestion of the constructs with XhoI, and the constructs were sequenced on an ABI373 automated sequencer (Applied Biosystems). Plasmid DNAs were transfected into the retroviral packaging cell line TELCeB by using Lipofectamine (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Stable clones were selected by the addition of 800 µg of G418 per ml 48 h after transfection. The infectious titers of the pseudotypes were determined by plating on 293 and ST-IOWA cells in the presence of 8 µg of Polybrene per ml and ß-galactosidase staining as described previously (24).
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
Primers were derived from sequences taken from the GenBank database, for PERV-A, GenBank accession codes Y12238; for PERV B, Y17013/Y12239; and for PERV-C, AFO38600. Sequences for the clones Ntr1 to-4 are as follows: gag accession AY368583 to -6 and env genes accession numbers AY368587 to -9 and AY288779. For Tr1 to-4 env genes accession codes are AY368579 to -82; for Tr5, AY371067.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
To identify PERV clones that may be important in the formation
of human-tropic viruses, we analyzed genomic DNA libraries made
from MS PBMC genomic DNA. Each library contained an average
insert size of approximately 18.2 kb and three to five genome
equivalents. A primary screen to identify lambda clones that
contained PERV-A proviral sequences was performed with (i) a
PERV-A-specific
env probe that is located within the VRA region
and (ii) a
gag probe, the sequence of which is conserved across
the PERV subgroups (
9). Double-positive clones were plaque purified
prior to further analysis. A PCR-based secondary screen that
analyzed the lengths of the
gag and
env genes of the clones
was performed. In order for a clone to be included in third-round
analysis, we required that the clone should produce near-full-length
gag and
env PCR products. Third-round analysis consisted of
PTT and sequencing analysis of
gag and
env PCR products to detect
loci that had full-length
gag and
env ORFs. In addition, those
gag-positive clones that possessed
env ORFs that extended beyond
the VRA region were also included in final analysis, because
these "long" defective PERV-A loci could be the genetic substrate
for the formation of human-tropic PERV. Finally, restriction
fragment length polymorphism analysis was performed on the qualifying
clones to identify unique loci.
The first-round screen of the genomic library from MS 11852, an HTRC PERV-nontransmitting (HTRC-NT) pig, identified a total of 106 PERV-A-positive clones (Fig. 1A). PCR analysis of purified clones indicated that 62 of the clones possessed gag and long env genes. The remaining 44 clones were excluded due to truncations of either their env (33 of 44 cases) or gag (2 of 44 cases) genes or of both genes (9 of 44 cases). Within the 62 gag- and env-positive clones, 22 were found to be positive by both gag and env PTT PCR, indicating that these loci were potentially replication competent. The remaining 40 clones were excluded due to the absence of the env ORF (30 of 40 cases), the gag ORF (5 of 40 cases), or both ORFs (5 of 40 cases). RFLP analysis of the 22 double-positive loci indicated that 9 were unique, and of these, sequence analysis indicated that only 4 (NTr1 to -4) had full-length gag genes, i.e., genes of similar size to the gag genes of known replication-competent PERV. Analysis of the env genes of the four associated PERV-A sequences indicated that they possessed greater than 97% homology to each other and to the previously characterized germ line PERV-A env sequence (GenBank accession number AF435967) (data not shown) (11). Interestingly, none of these clones possessed full-length env ORFs due to two common point mutations that introduced stop codons at either nucleotide (nt) 1906 (CGA to TGA) or nt 1963 (CAA to TAA). The stop codon at nt 1963 terminates the putative Env proteins six amino acid residues before the termination site observed with PK15-derived PERV-A, which can grow to high titers in human cells in vitro (Fig. 2) (for complete sequence comparison, see http://www.vet.gla.ac.uk/retrovirus/PERV.html).
The genotypes of the PERV clones identified during analysis
of the genomic DNA library made from MS 13519, an HTRC PERV-transmitting
(HTRC-T) animal, are summarized in Fig.
1B. A total of 120 PERV-A-positive
clones were identified during the primary screen of the library.
PCR analysis of purified clones indicated that 72 of the clones
initially possessed
gag and
env sequences. Of these 72 clones,
29 were positive for long
gag and
env genes as determined by
PTT PCR. Of the remainder, 14 were defective in
env, 8 were
defective in
gag, and the final 21 clones were negative for
gag and
env PTT PCR products. Within the 29
gag- and
env positive
clones, nucleotide sequencing revealed that five PERV-A clones
(Tr1 to -5) possessed long
gag and
env genes. The remaining
24 clones were either defective PERV-A or PERV-B; the latter
were probably identified due to cross-hybridization of the PERV-A
probe during the lower-stringency hybridization employed in
the primary screen.
Amino acid sequence analysis revealed no remarkable differences between the nucleotide sequences of the long env genes of the PERV-A loci present in the HTRC-T pig and HTRC-NT pigs (Fig. 2) (http://www.vet.gla.ac.uk/retrovirus/PERV.html), which is a reflection of the highly inbred nature of the MS herd (inbreeding coefficient, >0.9).
Studies of replication competence were performed with the PERV-A clones that may have possessed replication competence, i.e., the four isolated from the HTRC-NT library and two representative clones of the five isolated from HTRC-T library identified as possessing full-length gag ORFs as well as long env ORFs (i.e., truncated at nt 1906 or 1963). Purified lambda clone DNA was transfected into human (293) and pig (ST-IOWA) target cells, along with an enhanced green fluorescent protein reporter vector. Following transfection, approximately 10 to 30% of target cells expressed the enhanced green fluorescent protein reporter vector, indicating that the transfection was successful (data not shown). The cultures were monitored for supernatant RT activity for approximately 60 days. No production of RT activity was detected in either of the cell lines, indicating that the clones were not replication competent (Table 1). In contrast, RT activity was detectable with the control PERV-A clone (PERV-A60) after approximately 10 days in culture (data not shown).
In order to further analyze the competence of the clones, representative
env genes of long PERV-A loci were cloned into mammalian expression
vectors and transfected into the murine leukemia virus-based
pseudotype producer cell line TELCeB, which encodes ß-galactosidase
activity. As shown in Table
2, Env function was not detected
for any of the clones when tested on 293 or ST-IOWA cells.
To date, it has been assumed that (i) the production of human-tropic
PERV is governed by germ line proviral loci and (ii) the HTRC
PERV-A/C recombinants detected by using in vitro transmission
assays are tissue culture phenomena. However, the results reported
by Wood et al. (
28), indicating that PERV-A/C recombinants exist
in vivo, raise the possibility that the viruses might not be
present in the genomes of transmitting pigs. Therefore, we extended
the analysis of the genomic DNAs and the genomic library DNAs
(data not shown) from both animals in an attempt to identify
the presence of recombinant viruses. By PCR, PERV-A/C recombinants
were not detected in either the genomic DNA (Fig.
3) or the
genomic library DNA from the transmitter animal. It is noteworthy
that PERV-A/C recombinants were also not detected during the
screening of the HTRC-NT and HTRC-T genomic libraries. These
results are consistent with the hypothesis proposed by Wood
et al. (
28), indicating that these viruses are not present in
the germ line DNA of MS and that recombination may be critical
for the formation of human-tropic PERV.
To investigate the potential importance of PERV recombination
in more detail, we analyzed the functional
env sequences that
have been deposited in the GenBank database. We compared the
env sequences of five functional PERV-A and four functional
PERV-B GenBank sequences (isolated either from the PK-15 cell
line [
1,
4,
11] or from various pig breeds [
4,
15], along with
a representative PERV-A
env sequence isolated from the MS genomic
library. Alignment of these sequences indicated that all but
one of the PERV-A
env genes are recombinants with PERV-B within
the TM region (Fig.
4), with the exception being an
env sequence
(accession number
AF435967) which was derived from a weakly
replication-competent PERV-A cloned from the genomic DNA of
Large White pigs (
15). Interestingly, in contrast to the apparent
PERV-A/B recombinants identifiable in cell lines producing high
titers of PERV, the proviral PERV-A sequences identified in
the MS libraries appear to be nonrecombinant and most similar
to the PERV-A sequence under accession number
AF435967 (Fig.
4). The Env protein products encoded by the MS-derived sequences
were nonfunctional in pseudotype assays (Table
2). Given the
reproducible nature of the recombination with PERV-B, it is
tempting to speculate that the generation of HTRC PERV-A
env genes that can infect human cells at a significant titer, such
as the PK-15 cell line-derived envelope described by Le Tissier
et al. (
11), may be the result of recombination between PERV-A
and PERV-B elements in vitro.
In summary, in this study we were unable to identify PERV proviral
loci derived from either an HTRC-T or an HTRC-NT MS library
that possess replication competence in human 293 cells. Current
data indicate that HTRC PERV possesses
env genes that are recombinants
between PERV-A and -C
env sequences. Our PCR and genomic mapping
studies indicate that these recombinant viruses are not present
in the germ line DNA of MS, which, taken together with our observation
that recombinant PERVs can be identified in the PBMC of MS (
28),
indicates that recombination is an important mechanism in the
generation of PERVs that are able to infect human cells. The
identification of human-tropic recombinant PERV in vitro but
not in the germ line suggests that the recombination event may
occur de novo in each pig. A number of mechanisms potentially
underlie the generation of replication-competent PERV. First,
because PERV loci were not identified in transmitting pigs that
correlated with the potential to produce HTRC PERV, it is possible
that these elements are being generated in pig cells from a
number of defective germ line PERV elements. Thus, in a worst-case
scenario, despite an organ or tissue being free of replication-competent
retroviruses at the time of transplant, replication-competent
retroviruses might be generated in the organ while it is in
the xenograft recipient, thus exposing them to risk of infection.
Second, the PERV-A/C recombinant may exist as an exogenous agent
or may be generated as a result of infection of the pig with
an infectious PERV. If this proves to be correct, it may be
possible to dramatically reduce the rate of recombinant PERV
formation via established specific-pathogen-free pig derivation
procedures. Further studies are required to define the mechanism
by which PERV-A/C recombinant viruses are formed so that appropriate
strategies can be developed to remove these viruses from the
herd and improve the safety of xenotransplantation.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This research was supported in part by Immerge BioTherapeutics
Inc. and the Scottish Hospitals Endowment Research Trust RG6/02.
We gratefully acknowledge Y. Takeuchi (UCL, London, United Kingdom) for providing the PERV A-60 and PERV B-17 isolates and K. Patience for assistance in preparation of the manuscript.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Veterinary Pathology, University of Glasgow, Switchback Rd., Garscube Estate, Glasgow G61 1QH, United Kingdom. Phone: 44 141 330 2283. Fax: 44 141 330 5602. E-mail:
l.scobie{at}vet.gla.ac.uk.


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Journal of Virology, March 2004, p. 2502-2509, Vol. 78, No. 5
0022-538X/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.78.5.2502-2509.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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