Infectious laryngotracheitis virus, an alpha herpesvirus that does not interact with cell surface heparan sulfate

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Abstract

Among the alpha herpesvirus studied to date, the initial stage of wild- type virus attachment involves an interaction between virally encoded structural envelope glycoproteins (predominantly glycoprotein C) and cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans. An analysis of the infectious laryngotracheitis virus (ILTV) glycoprotein C and glycoprotein B sequences suggested that these proteins lacked consensus heparin-binding domains. This indicated that ILTV might attach to its host cell in a heparan-independent manner, distinct from other alpha herpesviruses. The infectivity of two ILTV strains, a tissue-culture-adapted vaccine strain and a virulent field challenge strain, were found to be insensitive to the presence of exogenous heparin or chondroitin. Furthermore, infectivity was retained in chicken embryonic liver cells treated with heparinase. However, 4°C attachment studies and penetration studies in the presence of citrate buffer clearly demonstrated that ILTV attaches stably to and effectively penetrates chicken embryonic liver cells. Consequently, ILTV represents an alpha herpesvirus whose initial attachment step does not involve interactions with heparan or chondroitin sulfate containing proteoglycans.

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Kingsley, D. H., & Keeler, C. L. (1999). Infectious laryngotracheitis virus, an alpha herpesvirus that does not interact with cell surface heparan sulfate. Virology, 256(2), 213–219. https://doi.org/10.1006/viro.1999.9609

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