Login / Signup

US10 Protein Is Crucial but not Indispensable for Duck Enteritis Virus Infection in Vitro.

Yunchao MaQiurui ZengMingshu WangAn-Chun ChengRenyong JiaQiao YangYing WuXin-Xin ZhaoMafeng LiuDekang ZhuShun ChenShaqiu ZhangYunya LiuYanling YuLing ZhangXiaoyue Chen
Published in: Scientific reports (2018)
To investigate the function of the duck enteritis virus (DEV) tegument protein US10, we generated US10 deletion and revertant mutants (ΔUS10 and US10FRT) via two-step RED recombination based on an infectious BAC clone of DEV CHv-BAC-G (BAC-G). In multistep growth kinetic analyses, ΔUS10 showed an approximately 100-fold reduction in viral titer, while the genome copies decreased only 4-fold compared to those of BAC-G. In one-step growth kinetic analyses, there were no significant differences in genome copies among BAC-G, ΔUS10 and US10FRT, but ΔUS10 still showed a 5- to 20-fold reduction in viral titer, and the replication defect of ΔUS10 was partially reversed by infection of US10-expressing cells. The transcription levels of Mx, OASL, IL-4, IL-6 and IL-10 in ΔUS10-infected duck embryo fibroblasts (DEFs) were significantly upregulated, while TLR3 was downregulated compared with those in BAC-G-infected DEFs. Taken together, these data indicated that US10 is vital for DEV replication and is associated with transcription of some immunity genes.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • sars cov
  • induced apoptosis
  • transcription factor
  • immune response
  • dna damage
  • protein protein
  • gene expression
  • inflammatory response
  • pregnant women
  • small molecule
  • artificial intelligence