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Mutations in the NS2B and NS3 genes affect mouse neuroinvasiveness of a Western European field strain of tick-borne encephalitis virus
Authors:Růzek Daniel  Gritsun Tamara S  Forrester Naomi L  Gould Ernest A  Kopecký Jan  Golovchenko Maryna  Rudenko Nataliia  Grubhoffer Libor
Affiliation:Institute of Parasitology, Biology Centre of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Branisovská 31, CZ-370 05 Ceské Budejovice, Czech Republic. ruzekd@paru.cas.cz
Abstract:An attenuated strain (263) of the tick-borne encephalitis virus, isolated from field ticks, was either serially subcultured, 5 times in mice, or at 40 degrees C in PS cells, producing 2 independent strains, 263-m5 and 263-TR with identical genomes; both strains exhibited increased plaque size, neuroinvasiveness and temperature-resistance. Sequencing revealed two unique amino acid substitutions, one mapping close to the catalytic site of the viral protease. These observations imply that virus adaptation from ticks to mammals occurs by selection of pre-existing virulent variants from the quasispecies population rather than by the emergence of new random mutations. The significance of these observations is discussed.
Keywords:Tick-borne encephalitis virus   Neuroinvasiveness   Viral protease
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