Identification of specific amino acid residues in the border disease virus glycoprotein E2 that modify virus growth in pig cells but not in sheep cells

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Identification of specific amino acid residues in the border disease virus glycoprotein E2 that modify virus growth in pig cells but not in sheep cells. / Fahnøe, Ulrik; Deng, Yu; Davids, Nana A; Lohse, Louise; Bukh, Jens; Belsham, Graham J; Rasmussen, Thomas Bruun.

In: The Journal of general virology, Vol. 101, No. 11, 2020, p. 1170-1181.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Fahnøe, U, Deng, Y, Davids, NA, Lohse, L, Bukh, J, Belsham, GJ & Rasmussen, TB 2020, 'Identification of specific amino acid residues in the border disease virus glycoprotein E2 that modify virus growth in pig cells but not in sheep cells', The Journal of general virology, vol. 101, no. 11, pp. 1170-1181. https://doi.org/10.1099/jgv.0.001483

APA

Fahnøe, U., Deng, Y., Davids, N. A., Lohse, L., Bukh, J., Belsham, G. J., & Rasmussen, T. B. (2020). Identification of specific amino acid residues in the border disease virus glycoprotein E2 that modify virus growth in pig cells but not in sheep cells. The Journal of general virology, 101(11), 1170-1181. https://doi.org/10.1099/jgv.0.001483

Vancouver

Fahnøe U, Deng Y, Davids NA, Lohse L, Bukh J, Belsham GJ et al. Identification of specific amino acid residues in the border disease virus glycoprotein E2 that modify virus growth in pig cells but not in sheep cells. The Journal of general virology. 2020;101(11):1170-1181. https://doi.org/10.1099/jgv.0.001483

Author

Fahnøe, Ulrik ; Deng, Yu ; Davids, Nana A ; Lohse, Louise ; Bukh, Jens ; Belsham, Graham J ; Rasmussen, Thomas Bruun. / Identification of specific amino acid residues in the border disease virus glycoprotein E2 that modify virus growth in pig cells but not in sheep cells. In: The Journal of general virology. 2020 ; Vol. 101, No. 11. pp. 1170-1181.

Bibtex

@article{f7ffd7ac5c7e457fb98eb70445acd164,
title = "Identification of specific amino acid residues in the border disease virus glycoprotein E2 that modify virus growth in pig cells but not in sheep cells",
abstract = "Border disease virus (BDV) envelope glycoprotein E2 is required for entry into cells and is a determinant of host tropism for sheep and pig cells. Here, we describe adaptive changes in the BDV E2 protein that modify virus replication in pig cells. To achieve this, two BDV isolates, initially collected from a pig and a sheep on the same farm, were passaged in primary sheep and pig cells in parallel with a rescued variant of the pig virus derived from a cloned full-length BDV cDNA. The pig isolate and the rescued virus shared the same amino acid sequence, but the sheep isolate differed at ten residues, including two substitutions in E2 (K771E and Y925H). During serial passage in cells, the viruses displayed clear selectivity for growth in sheep cells; only the cDNA-derived virus adapted to grow in pig cells. Sequencing revealed an amino acid substitution (Q739R) in the E2 domain DA of this rescued virus. Adaptation at the same residue (Q739K/Q739R) was also observed after passaging of the pig isolate in sheep cells. Use of reverse genetics confirmed that changing residue Q739 to R or K (each positively charged) was sufficient to achieve adaptation to pig cells. Furthermore, this change in host tropism was suppressed if Q739R was combined with K771E. Another substitution (Q728R), conferring an additional positive charge, acquired during passaging, restored the growth of the Q739R/K771E variant. Overall, this study provided evidence that specific, positively charged, residues in the E2 domain DA are crucial for pig-cell tropism of BDV.",
author = "Ulrik Fahn{\o}e and Yu Deng and Davids, {Nana A} and Louise Lohse and Jens Bukh and Belsham, {Graham J} and Rasmussen, {Thomas Bruun}",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1099/jgv.0.001483",
language = "English",
volume = "101",
pages = "1170--1181",
journal = "Journal of General Virology",
issn = "0022-1317",
publisher = "Society for General Microbiology",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Identification of specific amino acid residues in the border disease virus glycoprotein E2 that modify virus growth in pig cells but not in sheep cells

AU - Fahnøe, Ulrik

AU - Deng, Yu

AU - Davids, Nana A

AU - Lohse, Louise

AU - Bukh, Jens

AU - Belsham, Graham J

AU - Rasmussen, Thomas Bruun

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Border disease virus (BDV) envelope glycoprotein E2 is required for entry into cells and is a determinant of host tropism for sheep and pig cells. Here, we describe adaptive changes in the BDV E2 protein that modify virus replication in pig cells. To achieve this, two BDV isolates, initially collected from a pig and a sheep on the same farm, were passaged in primary sheep and pig cells in parallel with a rescued variant of the pig virus derived from a cloned full-length BDV cDNA. The pig isolate and the rescued virus shared the same amino acid sequence, but the sheep isolate differed at ten residues, including two substitutions in E2 (K771E and Y925H). During serial passage in cells, the viruses displayed clear selectivity for growth in sheep cells; only the cDNA-derived virus adapted to grow in pig cells. Sequencing revealed an amino acid substitution (Q739R) in the E2 domain DA of this rescued virus. Adaptation at the same residue (Q739K/Q739R) was also observed after passaging of the pig isolate in sheep cells. Use of reverse genetics confirmed that changing residue Q739 to R or K (each positively charged) was sufficient to achieve adaptation to pig cells. Furthermore, this change in host tropism was suppressed if Q739R was combined with K771E. Another substitution (Q728R), conferring an additional positive charge, acquired during passaging, restored the growth of the Q739R/K771E variant. Overall, this study provided evidence that specific, positively charged, residues in the E2 domain DA are crucial for pig-cell tropism of BDV.

AB - Border disease virus (BDV) envelope glycoprotein E2 is required for entry into cells and is a determinant of host tropism for sheep and pig cells. Here, we describe adaptive changes in the BDV E2 protein that modify virus replication in pig cells. To achieve this, two BDV isolates, initially collected from a pig and a sheep on the same farm, were passaged in primary sheep and pig cells in parallel with a rescued variant of the pig virus derived from a cloned full-length BDV cDNA. The pig isolate and the rescued virus shared the same amino acid sequence, but the sheep isolate differed at ten residues, including two substitutions in E2 (K771E and Y925H). During serial passage in cells, the viruses displayed clear selectivity for growth in sheep cells; only the cDNA-derived virus adapted to grow in pig cells. Sequencing revealed an amino acid substitution (Q739R) in the E2 domain DA of this rescued virus. Adaptation at the same residue (Q739K/Q739R) was also observed after passaging of the pig isolate in sheep cells. Use of reverse genetics confirmed that changing residue Q739 to R or K (each positively charged) was sufficient to achieve adaptation to pig cells. Furthermore, this change in host tropism was suppressed if Q739R was combined with K771E. Another substitution (Q728R), conferring an additional positive charge, acquired during passaging, restored the growth of the Q739R/K771E variant. Overall, this study provided evidence that specific, positively charged, residues in the E2 domain DA are crucial for pig-cell tropism of BDV.

U2 - 10.1099/jgv.0.001483

DO - 10.1099/jgv.0.001483

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 32857690

VL - 101

SP - 1170

EP - 1181

JO - Journal of General Virology

JF - Journal of General Virology

SN - 0022-1317

IS - 11

ER -

ID: 248500082