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Journal of Virology, January 2005, p. 725-731, Vol. 79, No. 2
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.2.725-731.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Integrating Reptilian Herpesviruses into the Family Herpesviridae
Duncan J. McGeoch* and
Derek Gatherer
Medical Research Council Virology Unit, Institute of Virology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom
Received 1 July 2004/
Accepted 18 August 2004

ABSTRACT
The phylogeny of reptilian herpesviruses (HVs) relative to mammalian
and avian HVs was investigated by using available gene sequences
and by alignment of encoded amino acid sequences and derivation
of trees by maximum-likelihood and Bayesian methods. Phylogenetic
loci were obtained for green turtle HV (GTHV) primarily on the
basis of DNA polymerase (POL) and DNA binding protein sequences,
and for lung-eye-trachea disease-associated HV (LETV) primarily
from its glycoprotein B sequence; both have nodes on the branch
leading to recognized species in the
Alphaherpesvirinae subfamily
and should be regarded as new members of that subfamily. A similar
but less well defined locus was obtained for an iguanid HV based
on a partial POL sequence. On the basis of short POL sequences
(around 60 amino acid residues), it appeared likely that GTHV
and LETV belong to a private clade and that three HVs of gerrhosaurs
(plated lizards) are associated with the iguanid HV. Based on
phylogenetic branching patterns for mammalian HV lineages that
mirror those of host lineages, we estimated a date for the HV
tree's root of around 400 million years ago. Estimated dates
for branching events in the development of reptilian, avian,
and mammalian
Alphaherpesvirinae lineages could plausibly be
accounted for in part but not completely by ancient coevolution
of these virus lines with reptilian lineages and with the development
of birds and mammals from reptilian progenitors.

INTRODUCTION
Herpesviruses (HVs) have a characteristic virion architecture,
comprising an icosahedral capsid with a
T = 16 arrangement of
spikes, a surrounding proteinaceous tegument layer, and a bounding
membrane with embedded protein species, with the overall diameter
of the particle being around 200 nm. Historically, possession
of this morphology was used to assign membership of the
Herpesviridae family, and on this basis, HVs were defined that were associated
with diseases in species across the animal kingdom, in mammals,
birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, and invertebrates (shellfish)
(
5,
20). Within the last two decades, sequence determination
of HV genes and genomes has vastly improved our understanding
of relationships among these viruses. Most sequencing studies
have been concerned with mammalian HVs, and it is well established
that these fall into three subfamilies (the
Alpha-,
Beta-, and
Gammaherpesvirinae) which are all related by descent from a
common ancestral HV species, as judged by extensive equivalences
in their gene complements (
13). The few avian HVs for which
sequence data are available are related to the mammalian viruses,
falling into two lineages in the
Alphaherpesvirinae. However,
amphibian and fish HVs comprise a separate grouping, which shows
only a very marginal relationship in gene content to the mammalian
and avian virus group, and the one characterized HV of an invertebrate
(oyster) forms a third distinct group (
5).
Over many years, HVs have been reported to be associated with diseases of reptiles, including species of snakes, lizards, and chelonians (i.e., turtles and tortoises); Wellehan et al. (28) have given an overview of the older literature on reptilian HVs. Until recently, such assignments depended on the criterion of virus particle morphology. On the basis of short DNA sequences obtained by PCR with primers for the HV DNA polymerase (POL) gene, Quackenbush et al. (16) reported that certain turtle HVs were related to the Alphaherpesvirinae. Further limited data have appeared for other HVs associated with chelonians, and longer sequences have now been published for the complete DNA polymerase and DNA binding protein (DBP) genes, plus parts of the UL28 and UL31 genes, of green turtle HV (GTHV) and for the glycoprotein B (gB) and protease/assembly protein genes of another HV of green turtle, lung-eye-trachea disease-associated HV (LETV). Limited sequences have also been described for HVs associated with lizards, including an iguanid HV (IgHV) and three HVs of gerrhosaurs (plated lizards) (GerHV1, GerHV2, and GerHV3). Accession numbers and references are listed in Table 1.
The phylogenetic status of reptilian HVs has remained rather
ill defined, inasmuch as publications to date have reported
only preliminary phylogenetic examinations of individual reptilian
HVs. The purpose of the analyses reported in this paper was
to assess the phylogenetic loci and relationships of reptilian
HVs as fully as possible by using currently available sequences,
to extend and integrate our understanding, and to explore emergent
implications for herpesvirus evolution.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
HV gene sequences.
Table
1 lists DNA sequences from reptilian HVs that were available
as of late 2003. Sequences for mammalian and avian HV genes
were obtained from public databases and from our own work; for
the sake of brevity, only those that are discussed directly
in the evaluation of the reptilian HVs are identified in this
paper (but see reference
12).
General computational handling of sequences.
General sequence handling used the GCG package (Accelrys, Inc.). Amino acid sequence sets were aligned by using CLUSTAL W (27) or MAFFT (9). Positions in an alignment that had a gap in any sequence were removed, and any regions regarded as too diverged to align were also excised.
Inference of phylogenetic trees.
The initial procedure used to derive and evaluate phylogenetic trees was as follows. For a given alignment of amino acid sequences representing a single gene set, relationships were first evaluated by the rapid clustering method of neighbor joining with bootstrapping (6). Based on these results, operational taxonomic units were defined that consisted of securely associated groupings of species, and these were used to examine up to 104 trees with the maximum-likelihood program Protml (MOLPHY package) (1), with a single rate of change for all sites in each sequence. A set of the top-scoring trees was then evaluated by the maximum-likelihood program Codeml (PAML package, version 3.13) (30), with a distribution of rates across sites specified by a discrete gamma distribution. The output data from Codeml were assessed by Shimodaira's approximately unbiased (AU) test by using the CONSEL package (24, 25). This general approach has been criticized by Goldman et al. (7) as potentially vulnerable to excluding, in its early stages, trees that would have scored highly in the final stage. In practice, our early stage analyses were so broadly based as to make the possibility of any such error remote. In addition, we separately analyzed the alignments by a Bayesian approach with a Monte Carlo Markov process (MrBayes 3) (21), which generates a probability distribution of tree topologies contingent on the input data and which is not subject to the criticism of Goldman et al. (7); the two approaches yielded closely equivalent results in all cases. Evaluations of phylogenetic loci of reptilian HVs using alignments of very short sequences (i.e., representing a minor part of the POL gene) were attempted by three approaches: first, by simple comparisons of pairwise distances between aligned sequences; second, by attempting de novo construction of trees; and third, by computing maximum likelihoods for sets of trees in which a single test HV sequence was inserted in turn at every branch of the tree topology derived from the complete HV POL alignment. A Perl script (Treeadder) was written to generate such sets of tree topologies for testing.
Estimations of dates for phylogenetic events.
Dates for nodes within HV trees were estimated by two approaches. In both, a calibration was applied that equated paleontological dates in the host lineages with particular nodes in the HV trees. The first approach was to compute, by using Codeml, a molecular clock version of the tree under study that retained the previously obtained tree topology and, in addition, specified the branch on which the tree's root was to be located while enforcing a constant rate of change across all branches. The single rate for such a tree was then expressed from the calibration dates in terms of substitutions per amino acid site in a given time, and from this, estimates of dates were made for nodes of interest. The second approach used r8s, a program that takes previously estimated trees and aims to minimize differences in substitution rate for each branch by smoothing procedures, without imposing the global uniformity of the molecular clock approach (22, 23). We employed the penalized likelihood option of the program with quasi-newtonian optimization and scaling by specification of fixed dates.

RESULTS
Phylogenetic locus of GTHV.
Phylogenetic trees were derived based on alignments of HV POL
sequences (final alignment length, 809 amino acids, 45 species)
and DBP sequences (final alignment length, 781 amino acids,
36 species). With each data set, the two methods employed (maximum
likelihood by use of Codeml and Bayesian inference by use of
MrBayes) gave closely comparable results, and one tree was identified
as clearly top scoring. These top-scoring trees are shown in
Fig.
1. The GTHV locus in each tree does not lie within any
of the clades corresponding to recognized genera or genus-level
groupings, and for our present purposes, this allows the trees
to be usefully represented in a condensed format, focusing on
genus-level clades rather than individual species. Figure
1 shows that with both POL and DBP trees, the GTHV lineage originates
from the branch that connects the
Alphaherpesvirinae to the
Beta- and
Gammaherpesvirinae, and in both cases, the node for
the GTHV branch lies closer to nodes within the alpha subfamily
than to any in the beta or gamma subfamilies. The best attainable
estimate for the root of the HV tree is that it lies on the
branch running between the alpha subfamily and the bifurcation
of the lineages to the beta and gamma subfamilies (
11). The
estimated root loci are shown for Fig.
1 as the midpoint of
the distance from the mean positions of branch tips in the alpha
subfamily to the mean positions of branch tips in the beta and
gamma subfamilies. By this criterion, the GTHV lineage in the
POL and DBP trees forms a clade with the alpha HV lineages.
We also investigated trees based on part of the UL31 gene (194
amino acids, 34 species); this smaller alignment gave an equivalent
but noisier result (data not shown). The small part of the UL28
gene for which a GTHV sequence was available (Table
1) was not
examined.
Three separate gene trees thus gave a concordant result for
the locus of GTHV in the phylogenetic tree of the
Herpesviridae.
The foremost interpretation of this analysis is that GTHV should
be regarded as a member of the
Alphaherpesvirinae, but for several
reasons, this cannot be taken as an incontrovertible conclusion.
First, inasmuch as the deep interior region of the tree from
which the GTHV lineage springs is unexplored territory, it is
conceivable that HVs mapping to this locus may turn out to be
sufficiently distinct that they should be regarded taxonomically
as a novel subfamily. Next, while the root assignments described
above place GTHV on the alpha subfamily line of descent, the
fact is that root placement in such trees is an estimation procedure
that necessarily falls short of rigorous deduction, so that
the root estimated may be significantly in error. An independent
input to classifying GTHV is provided by information on the
relative order and orientations of the UL28, DBP, POL, and UL31
genes in the GTHV genome: as pointed out by Nigro et al. (
14),
the GTHV arrangement matches that characteristic of the alpha
subfamily and is distinct from the arrangements in the beta
and gamma subfamilies. In cladistic terms, this common pattern
may constitute either a shared derived state (so that GTHV would
belong to the same clade as the recognized alphaherpesviruses)
or the ancestral state (and so would not be informative on the
relationship of GTHV to the alphaherpesviruses). Our position
is that the available substantive evidence comprises a reasonably
strong case for placing GTHV in the
Alphaherpesvirinae, and
this would meet present pragmatic norms of virus taxonomic practice.
Phylogenetic locus of LETV.
A similar analysis was carried out for an alignment of gB sequences (final alignment length, 616 amino acids, 61 species) that included LETV and an unambiguous top-scoring tree identified. As shown in Fig. 2, the gB tree gave a locus for LETV that was comparable to that found for GTHV. The shorter protease data set sequences (final alignment length, 188 amino acids, 38 species) gave a tree with an equivalent locus for LETV, but this was of lower value for our purposes, inasmuch as it did not include a sequence for infectious laryngotracheitis virus (which comprises the
4 clade in the trees shown in Fig. 1 and 2); the protease tree is not shown. Coberley et al. (4) have demonstrated that the relative order and orientations of the LETV genes for gB and the protease/assembly protein are characteristic of the alpha subfamily. Overall then, as for GTHV, there is a reasonable case for assigning LETV to the Alphaherpesvirinae.
The question then arises of the detail of the phylogenetic relationship
between GTHV and LETV. Because their tree loci were derived
by using disjunct sets of genes, the trees obtained are not
informative on whether GTHV and LETV belong to a single clade
branching from the main
Alphaherpesvirinae lineage or to separate
lineages with distinct points of divergence from the main
Alphaherpesvirinae lineage. However, the only presently available sequence that
may facilitate a direct comparison of GTHV and LETV is a short
section (181 nucleotides) of the LETV POL gene (Table
1). We
postpone treatment of this until the section below on analysis
with short sequence fragments.
Phylogenetic locus of IgHV.
Wellehan et al. (28) have described a partial POL gene sequence of 780 nucleotides for IgHV. We incorporated the corresponding amino acid sequence into an alignment containing 46 species and with a final length of 226 amino acids, i.e., comprising 28% of the complete POL alignment length used to examine the GTHV locus. The locus for IgHV was primarily analyzed by starting with the tree topology previously obtained from the whole POL alignment for 45 species, interpolating IgHV at each branch in turn, and evaluating the resulting set of 83 trees with Codeml. Two top-scoring trees were identified, as shown in Fig. 3. In tree A, the IgHV lineage branches from the lineage leading to the Alphaherpesvirinae deeper in the tree than the GTHV branch, whereas in tree B, IgHV is placed in a clade with GTHV. Trees A and B had closely equivalent AU scores (0.62 and 0.55, respectively), so we cannot discriminate between these two possible loci for IgHV with the available data.
Evaluation of phylogenetic relationships from short sequence fragments.
Other available sequences for reptilian HVs are short, representing
fragments obtained by PCR (Table
1). The sequences available
included seven 483-nucleotide and two 181-nucleotide POL gene
fragments of turtle HVs that were all very closely related to
the GTHV complete POL sequence; these evidently represented
strains of the same virus, or closely related viruses, and were
not examined further. The four other available sequences comprised
POL gene fragments for LETV, GerHV1, GerHV2, and GerHV3 (
29).
The amino acid sequences (59 or 60 residues) translated from
these sequences were aligned with the 46 known HV POL amino
acid sequences (including the partial IgHV sequence). We found
that the section of POL represented in the short sequences did
not enable an alignment of high quality. The N-terminal region
of 22 residues is strongly conserved and has 7 residues invariant
across the 50 input sequences. However, much of the C-terminal
portion is quite diverse and has a level of insertion-deletion
differences among sequences that limits its usefulness. Removing
gapped loci and a highly diverse section reduced the alignment,
for alphaherpesvirus and test sequences only, to 52 residues.
Other versions of reduced alignment that included beta- and
gammaherpesvirus sequences were also produced, with lengths
of 31 to 40 residues. While these alignments were the best achievable,
we regarded them as of indifferent overall quality.
Evaluations of the phylogenetic loci of LETV and the GerHVs were then attempted by three approaches, as described in Materials and Methods. Analyses based on such short sequences are intrinsically limited and can be expected to yield definite answers only in favorable cases, in particular, where the query sequence is closely similar to an already well-characterized instance. None of the short reptilian HV sequences were close to each other, nor to any other sequence, and the results obtained with them were judged indicative but not precise or robust; they are not described here in detail. In summary, LETV and GTHV appeared to be each other's closest relative, consistent with them belonging to the same lineage, while GerHV2 and GerHV3 appeared to be related to IgHV, with GerHV1 perhaps also belonging to this grouping.
Assessment of the evolution of the Herpesviridae.
In this section, we treat evolutionary implications of the finding that a group of reptilian HVs of some diversity forms a clade with the avian and mammalian HVs of the Alphaherpesvirinae; in this context, we refer to the whole clade as the alphaherpesvirus lineage. Our laboratory previously observed that many elements of the branching patterns for mammalian HVs in each subfamily of the Herpesviridae show congruence with the tree for corresponding lineages of mammalian host species, suggesting a prominent component of coevolution of hosts and viruses (10-12). The question thus arose as to whether this phenomenon of coevolution may extend also to reptilian and avian HVs, on a deeper timescale. To examine this, we estimated dates of nodes in the GTHV- and LETV-containing trees reported above by two approaches, namely application of a molecular clock and use of a rate-smoothing program.
Molecular clock trees are constructed to impose a constant rate across all branches. This may represent oversimplification of the data but allows a calibration of timescale from one or more nodes specified as having known dates. We used Codeml to compute versions of trees that retained the previously identified topologies but imposed the constraints of a molecular clock and placed the tree's root on the branch connecting the alphaherpesvirus lineage to the beta- plus gammaherpesvirus lineages. For this purpose, the DBP and POL datasets were concatenated to give a single alignment of 1,590 amino acids. We wished to infer a timescale for each tree by using the same calibration system for all trees and also to employ only calibration points from the alpha subfamily, as this was the most appropriate for our present purpose. The calibration used was therefore based on nodes in the
2 lineage, taking the divergence between bovine HV 1 and pseudorabies virus (suid HV 1) and the divergence between these artiodactyl viruses and equine HVs 1 and 4 as corresponding to the paleontological dates for separation of the ruminant and pig lineages and of artiodactyl and perissodactyl lineages, respectively. The values applied were 63.8 and 82.1 millions of years ago (Ma), respectively (26). The divergence rate for each HV data set was calculated as the mean value for the two data points in terms of substitutions/amino acid site/lineage/109 years, and date estimates for nodes of interest were then obtained. In addition to HV trees from the present study, we included a longer data set that comprised seven genes plus a single exon for 19 species (12). Table 2 summarizes the trees examined and dates estimated, and Fig. 4 shows the molecular clock tree for the DBP plus POL tree with the timescale applied. Estimates of dates for the trees containing turtle HV species are in good agreement with available corresponding estimates for the tree based on the large, 19-species alignment, with values for the date of the HV tree's root falling in the range of 374 to 420 Ma in the three trees examined. We consider the two estimates for nodes leading to turtle HVs (230 Ma for GTHV and 248 Ma for LETV) to be indistinguishable given the limitations of the data on which they are based.
We also applied the program r8s to estimating dates in the alphaherpesvirus
portions of the DBP plus POL tree and the gB tree. The r8s program
aims to estimate rates and dates in phylogenetic trees without
imposing a molecular clock, by using smoothing procedures to
find solutions that optimize compatibility among the branch
lengths provided as input. In these analyses, the beta- and
gammaherpesvirus portions in each tree served only to provide
the root locus. The same calibration points were specified as
for the molecular clock analysis. Both datasets required large
smoothing factors, indicating that the trees approximated molecular
clock behavior. The dates obtained, shown in Table
3, are similar
to those obtained via molecular clock trees. While for both
methods precision of the estimates would improve with data for
more genes of turtle HVs, we consider that the overall consistency
among the data sets gives confidence in employing their dates
in discussion of large-scale evolutionary scenarios.
Understanding of patterns in reptile evolution, which is required
for our analysis, is presently incomplete but maturing rapidly.
The earliest major split in reptilian lineages, estimated to
have occurred 310 Ma, was into lines distinguished by patterns
of cranial temporal aperture: most modern reptiles, and also
birds, evolved from the diapsid lineage (with two temporal openings)
while mammals eventually arose from the synapsid lineage (with
one temporal opening) (
2). Chelonians are anapsids, with no
temporal aperture; however, recent morphological and sequence-based
analyses are pointing to this condition as secondarily derived
from an earlier diapsid state (
3,
8,
17-
19,
32). Recent molecular
phylogenetic analyses have placed chelonians (order
Testudines)
as associated with either the
Archosauria (extant members birds
and crocodiles) or the
Lepidosauria (including lizards and snakes)
(
3,
8,
17,
32). From these published analyses we can, as shown
in Fig.
5A, draw a reasonably well-founded consensus tree that
presents lineages for the
Testudines,
Archosauria, and
Lepidosauria as an unresolved polytomy originating at around 270 to 285 Ma,
with the root of the tree as the diapsid-synapsid split at 310
Ma. This turns out to provide sufficient detail for our present
purpose. The corresponding HV tree is shown in Fig.
5B, drawn
to indicate incomplete resolution of details for GTHV, LETV,
and IgHV.
Our estimated date for the most recent common ancestor of alpha-,
beta-, and gammaherpesviruses (node B1 in Fig.
5) is earlier
than the date for the diapsid-synapsid divergence (node A1),
so our discussion here focuses on the alphaherpesvirus lineage.
The alphaherpesvirus lineage is now seen to comprise viruses
whose hosts come from highly diverged reptilian groups (chelonians
and lizards) plus reptile-derived groups (birds and mammals)
and to have developed from a common ancestor on a timescale
that approximates that of the major reptilian lineages plus
avian and mammalian lineages. We should thus treat the reptilian,
avian, and mammalian alphaherpesviruses as all of comparable
significance in considering the evolution of the lineage. While
neither the host tree nor the alphaherpesvirus tree (as depicted
in Fig.
5) has yet been fully resolved, it is clear that they
do not show global congruence. There are, however, two possible
but mutually exclusive scenarios that would economically relate
the two trees, both based on the date for node B2, the divergence
of reptilian HVs from avian and mammalian HVs. The first is
that node B2 represents the counterpart of the diapsid-synapsid
divergence, i.e., node A1 in the host tree. In this scenario,
reptilian and mammalian HV lines could have each coevolved with
their host lineages, but the two avian HV lines would have arisen
by transfer of HVs from synapsid reptilian or mammalian hosts.
The second scenario is that node B2 corresponds to node A2,
the radiation of the diapsids, so that reptilian and avian HV
lines could each have coevolved with their hosts, but the mammalian
HV clade would have arisen by a transfer mechanism. We regard
both of these as plausible and attractive interpretations. There
is no cogent reason to prefer one on the basis of the trees
in Fig.
5, although from a wider perspective, the fact that
the beta- and gammaherpesvirus clades both consist of mammalian
viruses with no known avian members could be taken as lending
support to the first scenario. Our overall evaluation is that
there was major ancient involvement of reptilian hosts in the
evolution of the alphaherpesvirus lineage but that unresolved
complexities remain in the details of the lineage's development.

DISCUSSION
Our analyses located GTHV and LETV lineages as both originating
from the lineage leading to the recognized members of the
Alphaherpesvirinae,
and on presently minimal evidence, it seems likely that GTHV
and LETV belong to a private clade. The IgHV lineage originates
in the same region of the HV tree, but its relationship to the
GTHV and LETV lineages is unresolved. We expect that a modest
additional amount of comparative data will serve to solidify
the GTHV-LETV relationship, for instance, either the GTHV gB
gene or LETV POL gene sequences. Resolving the locus for IgHV
could well prove a more demanding undertaking, given that the
present analysis based on 28% of the complete POL alignment
gave a result nicely balanced between two possibilities, and
we speculate that full resolution may require a set of several
gene sequences for IgHV, GTHV, and LETV. The fact that these
reptilian HV lineages originate in a central region of the HV
tree remote from other species can be expected to contribute
to the difficulty of fully resolving details of their phylogeny.
For the GerHV species, their relationships to each other and
to IgHV may well resolve with, say, a complete POL sequence
for each, contingent on the preliminary indication obtained
proving correct.
Our conclusions bear on arrangements for the taxonomy of the Herpesviridae. GTHV and LETV should now be included in the Alphaherpesvirinae. However, the deep points of origin of their lineages would require definition of either one or two new genera to accommodate them, and clearly, this action must await clarification of their relationship. For IgHV, we suggest that membership of the Alphaherpesvirinae should not be considered until more sequence data have been applied to phylogenetic analysis; data on gene arrangement would also be useful.
Our laboratory's first attempts at analyzing the apparent occurrence of coevolution of host and HV lineages, carried out a decade ago (10, 11), produced an HV family tree of estimated depth around 200 million years; that work depended on the straightforward but limited neighbor-joining method of tree construction. However, our subsequent modeling of the HV tree and possible host-virus coevolution by using computing-intensive maximum-likelihood methods and revised, deeper estimates of host paleontological dates has yielded a tree with its root at around 400 Ma (see reference 12 and the present paper). The detection of reptilian HV lines in the alphaherpesvirus lineage together with the increased estimate for the antiquity of the HV tree's root have now acted to revise our perspective on early evolution of the HV family since divergence from the most recent common ancestor. We consider that the most important outcome of this paper is its case that reptilian HV lineages be brought to the forefront in considering evolution of the family. The two possibilities described for coevolutionary development of early alphaherpesviruses with hosts remain a tentative sketch that should be developed with more data. A novel point is that the dates obtained for the timescale of the HV tree suggest that in principle there may exist, as yet undetected, HVs of reptiles or birds whose lineages originate from nodes deep in the trees of the beta and gamma subfamilies.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by the United Kingdom Medical Research
Council.
We thank J. Wellehan for early sight of data and A. Davison and R. Bowden for critical reading of the manuscript.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: MRC Virology Unit, Institute of Virology, Church St., Glasgow G11 5JR, United Kingdom. Phone: 44 141 330 4645. Fax: 44 141 337 2236. E-mail:
d.mcgeoch{at}vir.gla.ac.uk.


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Journal of Virology, January 2005, p. 725-731, Vol. 79, No. 2
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.2.725-731.2005
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