Equine infectious anemia virus derived from a molecular clone persistently infects horses

  • Whetter L
  • Archambault D
  • Perry S
  • et al.
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Abstract

A full-length molecular clone of equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) was isolated from a persistently infected canine fetal thymus cell line (Cf2Th). Upon transfection of equine dermis cells, the clone, designated CL22, yielded infectious EIAV particles (CL22-V) that replicated in vitro in both Cf2Th cells and an equine dermis cell strain. Horses infected with CL22-V developed an antibody response to viral proteins and possessed viral DNA in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, as determined by polymerase chain reaction assays. In addition, horses infected with CL22-V became persistently infected and were capable of transmitting the infection by transfer of whole blood to uninfected horses. However, CL22-V, like the parental canine cell-adapted virus, did not cause clinical signs in infected horses. Reverse transcriptase assays of CL22-V- and virulent EIAV-infected equine mononuclear cell cultures indicated that the lack of virulence of CL22-V was not due to an inability to infect and replicate in equine mononuclear cells in vitro.

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APA

Whetter, L., Archambault, D., Perry, S., Gazit, A., Coggins, L., Yaniv, A., … Tronick, S. (1990). Equine infectious anemia virus derived from a molecular clone persistently infects horses. Journal of Virology, 64(12), 5750–5756. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.64.12.5750-5756.1990

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