Abstract

The 5' untranslated region (5'UTR) of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) contains an internal ribosome entry site (IRES) that facilitates translation initiation of the viral ORF in a 5' (m7GpppN) cap-independent manner. IRES elements are responsible for the virulence phenotypes of several enteroviruses. Here, we constructed a chimeric virus in which the IRES of FMDV was completely replaced with that of bovine rhinitis B virus (BRBV) in an infectious clone of serotype O FMDV. The resulting IRES-replaced virus, FMDV(BRBV), replicated as efficiently as WT FMDV in hamster-derived BHK-21 cells, but was restricted for growth in porcine-derived IBRS-2, PK-15 and SK-6 cells, which are susceptible to WT FMDV. To identify the genetic determinants of FMDV underlying this altered cell tropism, a series of IRES-chimeric viruses were constructed in which each domain of the FMDV IRES was replaced with its counterpart from the BRBV IRES. The replication kinetics of these chimeric viruses in different cell lines revealed that the growth restriction phenotype in porcine-derived cells was produced after the replacement of domain 3 or 4 in the FMDV IRES. Furthermore, the change in FMDV cell tropism due to IRES replacement in porcine-derived cells was mainly attributed to a decline in cell-specific IRES translation initiation efficiency. These findings demonstrate that IRES domains 3 and 4 of FMDV are novel cell-specific cis-elements for viral replication in vitro and suggest that IRES-mediated translation determines the species specificity of FMDV infection in vivo.

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