Abstract

The replication of viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV) in appropriate host cells depends on environmental factors and the host cell's immunity. The dynamics of each VHSV RNA strand (vRNA, cRNA, and mRNA) in different conditions can provide a clue on the viral replication strategies, which can be a base for the development of efficient control measures. As VHSV is known to be sensitive to temperature and type I interferon (IFN) responses, in this study, we analyzed the effect of temperature difference (15 °C and 20 °C) and IRF-9 gene knockout on the dynamics of the three VHSV RNA strands in Epithelioma papulosum cyprini (EPC) cells using a strand-specific RT-qPCR. The tagged primers designed in this study successfully worked to quantify the three strands of VHSV. In the results of the temperature effect, the higher speed in viral mRNA transcription and the significantly higher (more than 10 times at 12–36 h) copy number of cRNA at 20 °C compared to those at 15 °C suggested the positive effect of high temperature on VHSV replication. In the results of the IRF-9 gene knockout effect, although IRF-9 gene knockout did not bring a dramatic effect on VHSV replication compared to the temperature effect, the increase of mRNA in IRF-9 KO cells was faster than normal EPC cells, which was reflected in the copy numbers of cRNA and vRNA. The IRF-9 gene knockout effect was not dramatic even in the replication of rVHSV-ΔNV-eGFP that harbors eGFP gene ORF instead of NV gene ORF. These results suggest that VHSV may be highly susceptible to pre-activated type I IFN responses but not highly susceptible to post-infection-mediated type I IFN responses or lowered type I IFN before infection. In both experiments of temperature effect and IRF-9 gene knockout effect, the copy number of cRNA never exceeded the copy number of vRNA at all assay times, suggesting that the binding efficiency of the RNP complex to the 3′ end of cRNA might be lower than that to the 3′ end of vRNA. Further research is needed to elucidate the regulatory mechanism that limits the amount of cRNA at an appropriate level during VHSV replication.

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