Abstract: | Six Sabin-derived persistent poliovirus mutants were selected in human neuroblastoma IMR-32 cells. The mutants had a titer 30 to 105 times lower in nonneural HEp-2c cells than in IMR-32 cells. When the growth cycles of persistent viruses in the two cell lines were compared, the most striking feature was a delay of 2 to 4 hr in virus release from HEp-2c cells. In HEp-2c cells, type 1 mutants could spontaneously establish a persistent infection in the absence of any exogenous viral inhibitor. Mutations at a rate of 1 every 210 nucleotides had accumulated in the genome of the type 1 mutants selected in neuroblastoma cells, modifying cell specificity and conferring the ability to persist in some non-neural cells. These results indicate that mutants of poliovirus with highly modified biological properties can be selected in vitro in cells of neural origin. |