A severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus-specific protein enhances virulence of an attenuated murine coronavirus

L Pewe, H Zhou, J Netland, C Tangudu… - Journal of …, 2005 - Am Soc Microbiol
L Pewe, H Zhou, J Netland, C Tangudu, H Olivares, L Shi, D Look, T Gallagher, S Perlman
Journal of virology, 2005Am Soc Microbiol
Most animal species that can be infected with the severe acute respiratory syndrome-
associated coronavirus (SARS-CoV) do not reproducibly develop clinical disease, hindering
studies of pathogenesis. To develop an alternative system for the study of SARS-CoV, we
introduced individual SARS-CoV genes (open reading frames [ORFs]) into the genome of an
attenuated murine coronavirus. One protein, the product of SARS-CoV ORF6, converted a
sublethal infection to a uniformly lethal encephalitis and enhanced virus growth in tissue …
Abstract
Most animal species that can be infected with the severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus (SARS-CoV) do not reproducibly develop clinical disease, hindering studies of pathogenesis. To develop an alternative system for the study of SARS-CoV, we introduced individual SARS-CoV genes (open reading frames [ORFs]) into the genome of an attenuated murine coronavirus. One protein, the product of SARS-CoV ORF6, converted a sublethal infection to a uniformly lethal encephalitis and enhanced virus growth in tissue culture cells, indicating that SARS-CoV proteins function in the context of a heterologous coronavirus infection. Furthermore, these results suggest that the attenuated murine coronavirus lacks a virulence gene residing in SARS-CoV. Recombinant murine coronaviruses cause a reproducible and well-characterized clinical disease, offer virtually no risk to laboratory personnel, and should be useful for elucidating the role of SARS-CoV nonstructural proteins in viral replication and pathogenesis.
American Society for Microbiology