Abstract
A pseudorabies virus (PrV) mutant, deficient in the nonessential glycoprotein E (gE) and expressing the LacZ gene (gE- βgal+ PrV), and its rescued virus were inoculated intranasally in mice. The median lethal dose of gE- βgal+ PrV was similar to that of the parental Kaplan strain, but mice survived longer and did not develop symptoms of pseudorabies. In the nasal mucosa, gE- βgal+ PrV replicated less efficiently than rescued virus. gE- βgal+ PrV could infect first-order trigeminal and sympathetic neurons innervating the nasal mucosa. However, transneuronal transfer to second-order cells groups did not occur in trigeminal pathways and was severely reduced in sympathetic pathways. The mutant was also unable to propagate in the parasympathetic system. In contrast, gE-rescued virus was transferred transneuronally in trigeminal, sympathetic, and parasympathetic pathways, like wild-type PrV. These findings provide further evidence that deletion of gE specifically affects transneuronal transfer of PrV more than penetration and multiplication of the virus in first-order neurons. © 1996 Academic Press, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Babic, N., Klupp, B., Brack, A., Mettenleiter, T. C., Ugolini, G., & Flamand, A. (1996). Deletion of glycoprotein gE reduces the propagation of pseudorabies virus in the nervous system of mice after intranasal inoculation. Virology, 219(1), 279–284. https://doi.org/10.1006/viro.1996.0247
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