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Antisense approaches for elucidating ranavirus gene function in an infected fish cell line

Authors: 
Whitley DS, Sample RC, Sinning AR, Henegar J, Chinchar VG
Citation: 
Dev Comp Immunol. 2011 Sep;35(9):937-48. doi: 10.1016/j.dci.2010.12.002. Epub 2010 Dec 13.
Abstract: 
Viral virulence/immune evasion strategies and host anti-viral responses represent different sides of the continuing struggle between virus and host survival. To identify virus-encoding molecules whose function is to subvert or blunt host immune responses, we have adapted anti-sense approaches to knock down the expression of specific viral gene products. Our intention is to correlate knock down with loss of function and thus infer the role of a given viral gene. As a starting point in this process we have targeted several structural and catalytic genes using antisense morpholino oligonucleotides (asMO) and small, interfering RNAs (siRNA). In proof of concept experiments we show the feasibility of this approach and describe recent work targeting five frog virus 3 genes. Our results indicate that both 46K and 32R, two immediate-early viral proteins, are essential for replication in vitro, and confirm earlier findings that the major capsid protein, the largest subunit of the viral homolog of RNA polymerase II, and the viral DNA methyltransferase are also essential for replication in cell culture.
Epub: 
Not Epub
Organism or Cell Type: 
cell culture: fish cells, frog virus 3