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Establishment of SeMNPV persistent infection in Spotoptera exigua cells / 病毒学报
Chinese Journal of Virology ; (6): 347-352, 2011.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM (Western Pacific) | ID: wpr-286030
Responsible library: WPRO
ABSTRACT
Persistent baculovirus infection is observed frequently in insect populations. Persistent infection can be transformed to a replicative and infective state caused by stress factors and plays an important role in regulating the size of insect population and in epizoology of baculoviruses. The aim of this study is to establish a persistently baculovirus-infected cell system to explore the molecular mechanisms of baculoviral persistence. Spodoptera exigua nucleopolyhedrovirus (SeMNPV) was serially undiluted passaged in Se301 cells to reduce virulence. Upon infection of Se301 cells with the SeMNPV up to passage 8, a few cells survived even if most of cells died due to virus infection. The surviving cells were passaged and designated as P8-Se301 cell strain. P8-Se301 cells had a population doubling time of 58-65 hours and grew slower than Se301 cells. Light microscopy and electron microscopy observation showed symptom of baculovirus infection, such as virogenic stroma, viral particles and occlusion bodies, in some of P8-Se301 cells. End-point dilution assay and infectious center assay showed that 4.14% +/- 0.99% cells continually released infectious progeny virus which replicated slower than SeMNPV in Se301 cells. The result indicated that P8-Se301 cells show a typical character trait of baculovirus persistent infection.
Subject(s)
Full text: Available Database: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Main subject: Physiology / Virology / Virus Cultivation / Cells, Cultured / Nucleopolyhedroviruses / Spodoptera / Methods Limits: Animals Language: Chinese Journal: Chinese Journal of Virology Year: 2011 Document type: Article
Full text: Available Database: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Main subject: Physiology / Virology / Virus Cultivation / Cells, Cultured / Nucleopolyhedroviruses / Spodoptera / Methods Limits: Animals Language: Chinese Journal: Chinese Journal of Virology Year: 2011 Document type: Article
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