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Differences in Tissue and Species Tropism of Reptarenavirus Species Studied by Vesicular Stomatitis Virus Pseudotypes

Authors :
Lev Levanov
Udo Hetzel
Juan Carlos de la Torre
Olli Vapalahti
Leonora Szirovicza
Teemu Smura
Yegor Korzyukov
Jussi Hepojoki
Anja Kipar
Luis Martinez-Sobrido
Rommel Paneth Iheozor-Ejiofor
Medicum
Viral Zoonosis Research Unit
Department of Virology
University of Helsinki
HUSLAB
Veterinary Pathology and Parasitology
Veterinary Biosciences
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine
Helsinki One Health (HOH)
Veterinary Microbiology and Epidemiology
University Management
Olli Pekka Vapalahti / Principal Investigator
Helsinki University Hospital Area
University of Zurich
Hepojoki, Jussi
Source :
Viruses, Volume 12, Issue 4, Viruses, Vol 12, Iss 395, p 395 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

Reptarenaviruses cause Boid Inclusion Body Disease (BIBD), and co-infections by several reptarenaviruses are common in affected snakes. Reptarenaviruses have only been found in captive snakes, and their reservoir hosts remain unknown. In affected animals, reptarenaviruses appear to replicate in most cell types, but their complete host range, as well as tissue and cell tropism are unknown. As with other enveloped viruses, the glycoproteins (GPs) present on the virion&rsquo<br />s surface mediate reptarenavirus cell entry, and therefore, the GPs play a critical role in the virus cell and tissue tropism. Herein, we employed single cycle replication, GP deficient, recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) expressing the enhanced green fluorescent protein (scrVSV∆G-eGFP) pseudotyped with different reptarenavirus GPs to study the virus cell tropism. We found that scrVSV∆G-eGFPs pseudotyped with reptarenavirus GPs readily entered mammalian cell lines, and some mammalian cell lines exhibited higher, compared to snake cell lines, susceptibility to reptarenavirus GP-mediated infection. Mammarenavirus GPs used as controls also mediated efficient entry into several snake cell lines. Our results confirm an important role of the virus surface GP in reptarenavirus cell tropism and that mamma-and reptarenaviruses exhibit high cross-species transmission potential.

Details

ISSN :
19994915
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Viruses
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c5963609432dccd8aac70a60a184ae84