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Tissue tropism of the HPRS-103 strain of J subgroup avian leukosis virus and of a derivative acutely transforming virus
- Source :
- Veterinary pathology. 34(2)
- Publication Year :
- 1997
-
Abstract
- The tissue tropism was studied for the HPRS-103 strain of avian leukosis virus, which belongs to a new envelope subgroup, designated J. Studies were conducted in blood monocyte and bone marrow cell cultures and in chickens from six lines that had been shown previously to differ in susceptibility to induction by this virus of myeloid leukosis and other tumors. Using an immunohistochemical technique to detect expression of viral group-specific antigen (Gag) in various tissues, we detected no major differences among the six lines of chickens at 3 and 7 weeks of age following infection as embryos. Thus, Gag expression did not correlate with differences in tumor susceptibility. Of the tissues examined, greatest Gag expression was observed in cells specific to the adrenal gland, heart, kidney, and proventriculus and especially in smooth muscle cells and connective tissue. After infection of 1-day-old chicks, greater tissue expression was observed in line 21 chicks, which mostly developed a tolerant viremic infection, than in Brown Leghorn chicks, which developed virus-neutralizing antibodies. An acutely transforming virus, strain 966, derived from HPRS-103-induced myeloid leukosis, showed a tropism similar to HPRS-103. The HPRS-103 strain showed a lower propensity to replicate in the medullary region of the lymphoid follicles of the bursa of Fabricius than did the RAV-1 strain of subgroup A avian leukosis virus. This low bursal tropism may be a factor in why HPRS-103 does not induce lymphoid leukosis. The HPRS-103 and 966 virus replicated in blood monocyte cultures from chickens from the six lines, indicating a tropism for the myelomonocytic cell lineage. In comparison, as previously reported, RAV-1 did not replicate well in the monocyte cultures, whereas RAV-2, a subgroup B avian leukosis virus, did replicate. The tropism of HPRS-103 for monocytes may relate to its ability to cause myeloid leukosis. Monocyte and bone marrow cell cultures from the six lines ranked similarly in differences in susceptibility to transformation by 966 virus and showed evidence that their relative susceptibilities correlated with susceptibility of chickens from these lines to induction of myeloid leukosis by HPRS-103, suggesting common tissue-specific viral and host factors involved in oncogenesis by these two viruses.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
animal structures
Myeloid
040301 veterinary sciences
viruses
Transforming virus
Connective tissue
Gene Products, gag
Chick Embryo
Biology
Virus
Monocytes
Cell Line
0403 veterinary science
03 medical and health sciences
Bursa of Fabricius
Species Specificity
Bone Marrow
medicine
Animals
Tropism
General Veterinary
Avian Leukosis Virus
Monocyte
04 agricultural and veterinary sciences
Cell Transformation, Viral
Virology
030104 developmental biology
medicine.anatomical_structure
Avian Leukosis
Tissue tropism
Chickens
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 03009858
- Volume :
- 34
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Veterinary pathology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c4f53a7c8e7cf5b24945626bfbb2cd3a