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Published in: Virology Journal 1/2017

Open Access 01-12-2017 | Research

C-terminal region of apoptin affects chicken anemia virus replication and virulence

Authors: Yongqiang Wang, Xiuqing Song, Honglei Gao, Xiaoyan Wang, Yonghao Hu, Yulong Gao, Xiaole Qi, Liting Qin, Huan Lin, Li Gao, Shuai Yao, Chunyan Han, Xiaomei Wang, Hualan Chen

Published in: Virology Journal | Issue 1/2017

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Abstract

Background

Chicken anemia virus (CAV) causes anemia and immune suppression, which are important diseases in the poultry industry. CAV VP3, also referred as ‘apoptin’, has been shown to selectively kill tumor cells, raising great hopes for its utilization as an anticancer therapy. The ability of apoptin to induce apoptosis is closely related to its nuclear localization. The C-terminal region of apoptin contains a bipartite nuclear localization signals (NLS), and a nuclear export signal (NES) is located between the arms of the NLS. Most previous studies have expressed apoptin of different lengths in vitro to understand the relationship between its localization and its induction of apoptosis.

Methods

In this study, we investigated the replication of CAV and its induction of apoptosis in vitro and in vivo with VP3-truncated infectious virus. Quantitative PCR was used to detect viral replication in MDCC-MSB1 cells, and the viral localization was observed by confocal microscopy. Flow cytometry was uesed to analyze virus-induced apoptosis in MDCC-MSB1 cells. Additionally, chickens infected with the rescued viruses compared with the parental virus rM9905 to evaluate the viral replication in vivo and virulence.

Results

Based on the infectious clone, we rescued two viruses in which were deleted NES–NLS2 (rCAV-VP3N88) or NLS1–NES–NLS2 (rCAV-VP3N80) in the C-terminal region of apoptin. The viral load of rCAV-VP3N88 decreased significantly between 60 and 108 hpi, and was always 10–100-fold lower than that of the parental virus rM9905. The levels of rCAV-VP3N80 were also 10–100-fold lower than that of rM9905 and declined significantly at three time points. There was almost no difference in the viral loads of rCAV-VP3N88 and rCAV-VP3N80. Additionally, rM9905 induced 85.39 ± 2.18% apoptosis at 96 hpi, whereas rCAV-VP3N88 and rCAV-VP3N80 induced 63.08 ± 4.78% and 62.56 ± 7.35% apoptosis, respectively, which were significantly (about 20%) lower than that induced by the parental virus. The rescued viruses altered the nuclear localization in MDCC-MSB1 cells. Moreover, deletion of C-terminal region of apoptin impaired viral replication in vivo and reduced the virulence of CAV in chickens.

Conclusions

In summary, we have demonstrated that the C-terminal deletion of apoptin in infectious CAV affected the replication of the virus. The deletion of the C-terminal region of apoptin not only significantly reduced viral replication in vitro but also reduced its induction of apoptosis, which correlated with the loss of its nuclear localization. The deletion of the C-terminal region of apoptin also impaired the replication of CAV and attenuated its virulence in chickens.
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Metadata
Title
C-terminal region of apoptin affects chicken anemia virus replication and virulence
Authors
Yongqiang Wang
Xiuqing Song
Honglei Gao
Xiaoyan Wang
Yonghao Hu
Yulong Gao
Xiaole Qi
Liting Qin
Huan Lin
Li Gao
Shuai Yao
Chunyan Han
Xiaomei Wang
Hualan Chen
Publication date
01-12-2017
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Virology Journal / Issue 1/2017
Electronic ISSN: 1743-422X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12985-017-0713-9

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