Abstract

In order to study the function of bovine adenovirus type 3 (BAV-3) E1A and E1B(small) proteins, we constructed two mutants: (a) BAV102A carries an in-frame deletion in the coding region for the E1A protein (nt 831-1080); (b) BAV102B carries an insertion of triple stop codons in the E1B region (nt 1654, 178 bp downstream of the E1B(small) start codon), which stops the translation of the E1B(small) gene. BAV102A virus could grow to the wild-type BAV-3 titer in transformed cell line VIDO R2 (HAV-5 E1 transformed) cells, but no progeny virus could be found in fetal bovine retina cells (FBRC). RT-PCR and Western blot analysis showed that neither mRNA transcripts nor protein expression of early genes [E1B(small) and DNA binding protein (DBP)] could be detected in BAV102A infected FBRC. The BAV102B grew 1.5 log less than wild-type BAV-3 in FBRC; however, no BAV102B progeny virus could be observed in bovine fibroblast (BFB) cells. No appreciable difference was observed in DBP transcript synthesis between wild-type BAV-3- or BAV102B-infected FBRC. However, compared to wild-type BAV-3, BAV102B viral DNA synthesis and fiber gene expression were found to be slightly reduced in FBRC. In contrast, compared to wild-type BAV-3, DBP transcripts and viral DNA synthesis were drastically reduced in BAV102B-infected BFB cells. In addition, no fiber gene expression could be detected in BAV102B-infected BFB cells. These results suggest that BAV-3 E1A is essential for virus replication and is required for activating the transcription of other BAV-3 early genes. However, the requirement for E1B(small) protein for BAV-3 replication appears to be cell type-dependent.

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