Abstract
We document the rapid alteration of fitness of two foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) mutants resistant to a neutralizing monoclonal antibody. Both mutants showed a selective disadvantage in BHK-21 cells when passaged in competition with their parental FMDV. Upon repeated replication of the mutants alone, they acquired a selective advantage over the parental FMDV and fixed additional genomic substitutions without reversion of the monoclonal antibody-resistant phenotype. Thus, variants that were previously kept at low frequency in the mutant spectrum of a viral quasispecies rapidly became the master sequence of a new genomic distribution and dominated the viral population.
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CITATION STYLE
Martínez, M. A., Carrillo, C., González-Candelas, F., Moya, A., Domingo, E., & Sobrino, F. (1991). Fitness alteration of foot-and-mouth disease virus mutants: measurement of adaptability of viral quasispecies. Journal of Virology, 65(7), 3954–3957. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.65.7.3954-3957.1991
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