Genomic organisation of a virulent Taiwanese strain of transmissible gastroenteritis virus

5Citations
Citations of this article
6Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Transmissible gastroenteritis (TGE) infection causes 65% of infectious piglet diarrhoea in Taiwan. A virulent Taiwanese strain, TFI, of transmissible gastroenteritis virus (TGEV) from a field outbreak was isolated in cell culture and plaque purified. Phenotypic differences were observed in the ability of TFI to infect certain cell lines. TGEV strains TLM-83 (PRCV Belgium), TO-163 (TGEV Japan) and Purdue-115 (TGEV USA) infected both ST (swine testis) and RPTG (pig kidney) cell lines whereas TFI infected ST but not RPTG cells. To investigate this phenotypic variation cDNA was generated from TFI genomic and amplified by PCR with oligonucleotides derived from published TGEV sequence data. An 8.4 kb cDNA derived from the 3'-end of the TFI genome was sequenced. Eight ORFs, corresponding to the three structural protein genes, four potential genes and the 3'-end of an incomplete ORF whose amino acid sequence corresponded to the carboxyl end of the 1b subunit of the polymerase gene, were identified on the TFI sequence. The overall sequence similarity of TFI with the other TGEV strains was over 97%. However, several deletions, insertions and point mutations were found on the TFI sequence when compared with other TGEV strains. The TFI S protein was found to contain 1449 amino acids, as also identified for the FS772/70 and Miller TGEV strains, but two amino acids longer than the Purdue S protein. The TFI ORF-3a gene encodes 72 amino acids, however, a 37 nucleotide deletion was found 16 nucleotides downstream of the TFI ORF-3a stop codon. The TFI M, N, ORF-4 and ORF-7 genes are highly conserved in comparison to other TGEV strains.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Chen, C. M., Pocock, D. H., & Britton, P. (1994). Genomic organisation of a virulent Taiwanese strain of transmissible gastroenteritis virus. In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology (Vol. 342, pp. 23–28). Springer Science and Business Media, LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-2996-5_4

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free