Incorporation of uracil into viral DNA correlates with reduced replication of EIAV in macrophages

Virology
W K SteagallS L Payne

Abstract

The retrovirus equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) encodes a dUTPase situated between reverse transcriptase and integrase. We have described the inability of EIAV with a 270-bp dUTPase deletion, delta DU EIAV, to replicate to wild-type (WT) levels in equine macrophages (D. S. Threadgill, W. K. Steagall, M. T. Flaherty, F. J. Fuller, S. T. Perry, K. E. Rushlow, S. F. J. LeGrice, and S. L. Payne, J. Virol. 67, 2592-2600, 1993). Here we describe the construction of a second dUTPase-deficient virus (DUD71E) containing a single amino acid substitution in dUTPase. delta DU and DUD71E replicate to 2% of WT levels in macrophages by 7 days postinfection, when WT EIAV is highly cytopathic. To identify the replication block(s), we analyzed DNA synthesis, integration, and transcription. DNA synthesis was normal in macrophages, with evidence of full-length viral DNA by 24 hr postinfection. The level of integrated delta DU and DUD71E DNA appeared to be decreased 2- to 3-fold compared to WT. Steady-state levels of full-length viral transcripts were decreased over 100-fold, indicating that replication of dUTPase-deficient EIAV is blocked between viral DNA synthesis and transcription. As dUTP hydrolysis normally plays a role in preventing inc...Continue Reading

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