Detection of myxoma viruses encoding a defective M135R gene from clinical cases of myxomatosis; Possible implications for the role of the M135R protein as a virulence factor

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Detection of myxoma viruses encoding a defective M135R gene from clinical cases of myxomatosis; Possible implications for the role of the M135R protein as a virulence factor. / Belsham, Graham J.; Polacek, Charlotta; Breum, Solvej; Larsen, Lars E.; Bøtner, Anette.

In: Virology Journal, Vol. 7, 7, 2010.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Belsham, GJ, Polacek, C, Breum, S, Larsen, LE & Bøtner, A 2010, 'Detection of myxoma viruses encoding a defective M135R gene from clinical cases of myxomatosis; Possible implications for the role of the M135R protein as a virulence factor', Virology Journal, vol. 7, 7. https://doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-7-7

APA

Belsham, G. J., Polacek, C., Breum, S., Larsen, L. E., & Bøtner, A. (2010). Detection of myxoma viruses encoding a defective M135R gene from clinical cases of myxomatosis; Possible implications for the role of the M135R protein as a virulence factor. Virology Journal, 7, [7]. https://doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-7-7

Vancouver

Belsham GJ, Polacek C, Breum S, Larsen LE, Bøtner A. Detection of myxoma viruses encoding a defective M135R gene from clinical cases of myxomatosis; Possible implications for the role of the M135R protein as a virulence factor. Virology Journal. 2010;7. 7. https://doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-7-7

Author

Belsham, Graham J. ; Polacek, Charlotta ; Breum, Solvej ; Larsen, Lars E. ; Bøtner, Anette. / Detection of myxoma viruses encoding a defective M135R gene from clinical cases of myxomatosis; Possible implications for the role of the M135R protein as a virulence factor. In: Virology Journal. 2010 ; Vol. 7.

Bibtex

@article{cefea75541bf4bd9a0a5de4b8a99f9a0,
title = "Detection of myxoma viruses encoding a defective M135R gene from clinical cases of myxomatosis; Possible implications for the role of the M135R protein as a virulence factor",
abstract = "Background. Myxoma virus is a member of the Poxviridae and causes disease in European rabbits. Laboratory confirmation of the clinical disease, which occurs in the autumn of most years in Denmark, has been achieved previously using antigen ELISA and electron microscopy. Results. An unusually large number of clinically suspected cases of myxomatosis were observed in Denmark during 2007. Myxoma virus DNA was detected, using a new real time PCR assay which targets the M029L gene, in over 70% of the clinical samples submitted for laboratory confirmation. Unexpectedly, further analysis revealed that a high proportion of these viral DNA preparations contained a frame-shift mutation within the M135R gene that has previously been identified as a virulence factor. This frame-shift mutation results in expression of a greatly truncated product. The same frame-shift mutation has also been found recently within an avirulent strain of myxoma virus (6918). However, three other frame-shift mutations found in this strain (in the genes M009L, M036L and M148R) were not shared with the Danish viruses but a single nucleotide deletion in the M138R/M139R intergenic region was a common feature. Conclusions. It appears that expression of the full-length myxoma virus M135R protein is not required for virulence in rabbits. Hence, the frame-shift mutation in the M135R gene in the nonpathogenic 6918 virus strain is not sufficient to explain the attenuation of this myxoma virus but one/some of the other frame-shift mutations alone or in conjunction with one/some of the thirty two amino acid substitutions must also contribute. The real time PCR assay for myxoma virus is a useful diagnostic tool for laboratory confirmation of suspected cases of myxomatosis.",
author = "Belsham, {Graham J.} and Charlotta Polacek and Solvej Breum and Larsen, {Lars E.} and Anette B{\o}tner",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1186/1743-422X-7-7",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
journal = "Virology Journal",
issn = "1743-422X",
publisher = "BioMed Central",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Detection of myxoma viruses encoding a defective M135R gene from clinical cases of myxomatosis; Possible implications for the role of the M135R protein as a virulence factor

AU - Belsham, Graham J.

AU - Polacek, Charlotta

AU - Breum, Solvej

AU - Larsen, Lars E.

AU - Bøtner, Anette

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - Background. Myxoma virus is a member of the Poxviridae and causes disease in European rabbits. Laboratory confirmation of the clinical disease, which occurs in the autumn of most years in Denmark, has been achieved previously using antigen ELISA and electron microscopy. Results. An unusually large number of clinically suspected cases of myxomatosis were observed in Denmark during 2007. Myxoma virus DNA was detected, using a new real time PCR assay which targets the M029L gene, in over 70% of the clinical samples submitted for laboratory confirmation. Unexpectedly, further analysis revealed that a high proportion of these viral DNA preparations contained a frame-shift mutation within the M135R gene that has previously been identified as a virulence factor. This frame-shift mutation results in expression of a greatly truncated product. The same frame-shift mutation has also been found recently within an avirulent strain of myxoma virus (6918). However, three other frame-shift mutations found in this strain (in the genes M009L, M036L and M148R) were not shared with the Danish viruses but a single nucleotide deletion in the M138R/M139R intergenic region was a common feature. Conclusions. It appears that expression of the full-length myxoma virus M135R protein is not required for virulence in rabbits. Hence, the frame-shift mutation in the M135R gene in the nonpathogenic 6918 virus strain is not sufficient to explain the attenuation of this myxoma virus but one/some of the other frame-shift mutations alone or in conjunction with one/some of the thirty two amino acid substitutions must also contribute. The real time PCR assay for myxoma virus is a useful diagnostic tool for laboratory confirmation of suspected cases of myxomatosis.

AB - Background. Myxoma virus is a member of the Poxviridae and causes disease in European rabbits. Laboratory confirmation of the clinical disease, which occurs in the autumn of most years in Denmark, has been achieved previously using antigen ELISA and electron microscopy. Results. An unusually large number of clinically suspected cases of myxomatosis were observed in Denmark during 2007. Myxoma virus DNA was detected, using a new real time PCR assay which targets the M029L gene, in over 70% of the clinical samples submitted for laboratory confirmation. Unexpectedly, further analysis revealed that a high proportion of these viral DNA preparations contained a frame-shift mutation within the M135R gene that has previously been identified as a virulence factor. This frame-shift mutation results in expression of a greatly truncated product. The same frame-shift mutation has also been found recently within an avirulent strain of myxoma virus (6918). However, three other frame-shift mutations found in this strain (in the genes M009L, M036L and M148R) were not shared with the Danish viruses but a single nucleotide deletion in the M138R/M139R intergenic region was a common feature. Conclusions. It appears that expression of the full-length myxoma virus M135R protein is not required for virulence in rabbits. Hence, the frame-shift mutation in the M135R gene in the nonpathogenic 6918 virus strain is not sufficient to explain the attenuation of this myxoma virus but one/some of the other frame-shift mutations alone or in conjunction with one/some of the thirty two amino acid substitutions must also contribute. The real time PCR assay for myxoma virus is a useful diagnostic tool for laboratory confirmation of suspected cases of myxomatosis.

U2 - 10.1186/1743-422X-7-7

DO - 10.1186/1743-422X-7-7

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 20078890

AN - SCOPUS:76949099913

VL - 7

JO - Virology Journal

JF - Virology Journal

SN - 1743-422X

M1 - 7

ER -

ID: 247398976