The highly fibroblast-passaged AD169, Towne, and Davis strains of cytomegalovirus (CMV) were found to have a restricted capacity to infect endothelial cells in vitro. Although such replication could be increased by a combination of low speed centrifugation and sodium butyrate treatment, the extracel
Genomes of the endothelial cell-tropic variant and the parental Toledo strain of human cytomegalovirus are highly divergent
✍ Scribed by Fausto Baldanti; M. Grazia Revello; Elena Percivalle; Nazzarena Labò; Giuseppe Gerna
- Book ID
- 102383467
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 165 KB
- Volume
- 69
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0146-6615
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✦ Synopsis
The low-passage Toledo strain of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) and fresh clinical HCMV isolates have been reported to share the capacity to propagate efficiently in endothelial cell cultures. In the laboratory, however, repeated attempts to adapt the Toledo strain to growth in endothelial cells have been unsuccessful. Southern blot analysis of the entire viral genome and restriction length polymorphism analysis of multiple genome regions amplified by PCR demonstrated that the reported endothelial cell-tropic viral variant of the Toledo strain and the parental Toledo strain are highly divergent. In fact, the restriction profile of the genome of the endothelial cell-tropic variant seems highly distinct from that of the parental strain. In conclusion, the degree of dissimilarity between the two genomes suggests that the endothelial cell-tropic variant of the Toledo strain could have originated from a recombination event.
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