Virus research | 2021

Simultaneous Tracking of Capsid VP26, Envelope Protein gC Localization in Living Cells Infected with Double Fluorescent Duck Enteritis Virus.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Duck enteritis virus (DEV) can cause an acute, contagious and lethal disease of many species of waterfowl. An infectious bacterial artificial chromosome clone of DEV vaccine strain pE1 (pDEV-EF1) has been constructed in our previous study. Based on pE1, a recombinant mutated clone pDL (pVP26CFP-gCRFP), which carries a red fluorescent protein (mRFP) gene fused to the viral envelope protein gC in combination with a cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) gene fused to the viral capsid VP26, was constructed by two-step Red/ET recombination and the recombinant virus rDL (rVP26CFP-gCRFP) was rescued from chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEFs) by calcium phosphate transfection. Western blot analysis revealed that VP26-CFP and gC-mRFP were both expressed in fusion forms in rDL-infected CEFs, and subcellular localization study showed that gC-mRFP was mainly localized in whole cell at 36, 48\u2009h post infection (p.i.); and then mostly migrated to the cytoplasm after 60\u2009h.p.i., ; whereas VP26-CFP was localized in the nucleus in all stages of virus infection. Additionally, viral particles at different stages of morphogenesis (A capsids, B capsids, C capsids) were observed in virus-infected cells by transmission electron microscopy, indicating that exogenous gene insertion has no effect on virus assembly. This study has laid a foundation for visually studying localization, transportation of DEV capsid proteins and envelope glycoproteins as well as virus assembly, virion movement and virus-cell interaction.

Volume None
Pages \n 198393\n
DOI 10.1016/j.virusres.2021.198393
Language English
Journal Virus research

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