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Journal of Virology, July 2000, p. 5788-5795, Vol. 74, No. 13
Division of Biology, Kansas State University,
Manhattan, Kansas 66506-4901
Received 16 February 2000/Accepted 13 April 2000
RNA polymerase complexes were purified from Cryptosporidium
parvum, a parasitic protozoan known to infect many species of mammals including humans. Western blot analysis revealed the
association of the complexes with two different proteins, encoded by
large and small segments of viral double-stranded RNAs. Each complex was found to contain only double-stranded RNA, both double- and single-stranded RNA, or only single-stranded RNA. Maximum RNA-dependent RNA polymerase activity was observed within the complexes containing both double- and single-stranded RNAs. These complexes possessed both
transcriptase and replicase polymerase activities. Virus-like particles
with a diameter of 31 nm were copurified with RNA polymerase complexes,
and buoyant density and polymerase studies suggest that C. parvum harbors a putative double-stranded RNA virus which separately encapsidates the large and small RNA segments. The mechanism
of replication and other characteristics of this virus are similar to
those of the viruses of the family Partitiviridae, previously identified only in fungi and plants.
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Association of RNA Polymerase Complexes of the
Parasitic Protozoan Cryptosporidium parvum with Virus-Like
Particles: Heterogeneous System
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Ackert Hall,
Division of Biology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506-4901. Phone: (785) 532-6639. Fax: (785) 532-6653. E-mail:
podolsk{at}ksu.edu.
Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station contribution no. 00-301-J.
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