Mammals Preferred: Reassortment of Batai and Bunyamwera orthobunyavirus Occurs in Mammalian but Not Insect Cells.
Anna HeitmannFrederic GusmagMartin G RathjensMaurice MaurerKati FrankzeSabine SchichtStephanie JansenJonas Schmidt-ChanasitKlaus JungStefanie C BeckerPublished in: Viruses (2021)
Reassortment is a viral genome-segment recomposition known for many viruses, including the orthobunyaviruses. The co-infection of a host cell with two viruses of the same serogroup, such as the Bunyamwera orthobunyavirus and the Batai orthobunyavirus, can give rise to novel viruses. One example is the Ngari virus, which has caused major outbreaks of human infections in Central Africa. This study aimed to investigate the potential for reassortment of Bunyamwera orthobunyavirus and the Batai orthobunyavirus during co-infection studies and the replication properties of the reassortants in different mammalian and insect cell lines. In the co-infection studies, a Ngari-like virus reassortant and a novel reassortant virus, the Batunya virus, arose in BHK-21 cells (Mesocricetus auratus). In contrast, no reassortment was observed in the examined insect cells from Aedes aegypti (Aag2) and Aedes albopictus (U4.4 and C6/36). The growth kinetic experiments show that both reassortants are replicated to higher titers in some mammalian cell lines than the parental viruses but show impaired growth in insect cell lines.
Keyphrases
- aedes aegypti
- zika virus
- dengue virus
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- endothelial cells
- magnetic resonance
- single cell
- sars cov
- signaling pathway
- cell therapy
- cell death
- case control
- magnetic resonance imaging
- cell proliferation
- genome wide
- stem cells
- gene expression
- computed tomography
- mesenchymal stem cells
- climate change
- contrast enhanced
- pi k akt