Abstract

A mutant with deletion of the glycoprotein gIII gene was produced from a Japanese isolate of pseudorabies virus (PrV) and characterized. Viral titers of the mutant propagated in PK-15 cells were always lower than those of the parental virus. The parental virus agglutinated BALB/c mouse erythrocytes, whereas the deletion mutant showed no hemagglutinating activity. Pigs inoculated with the parental virus produced not only neutralizing but also hemagglutination-inhibiting antibodies. On the other hand, the mutant induced high titers of neutralizing antibody comparable to the parental virus but no hemagglutination-inhibiting antibody in inoculated pigs, suggesting that glycoprotein gIII is an essential component for hemagglutination of PrV. Finally, no evidence that the deletion mutant lost virulence for mice was obtained.

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