Abstract

A panel of monoclonal antibodies that recognize the two major glycoproteins of bovine viral diarrhea virus (BDV) was used to evaluate the antigenic relationship between cytopathic (CP) and noncytopathic (NCP) viruses isolated from cattle dead or dying from fatal BDV infections. Various unrelated BDV isolates were initially screened by indirect immunofluorescence with monoclonal antibodies directed against the 56- to 58- and 48-kilodalton glycoproteins of the virus. A wide spectrum of reactivity that was independent of biotype was found. Biological clones of the same isolate showed only minor variations from the parental isolate, as did isolates taken from different animals located on the same farm. A similar analysis was repeated with pairs of CP and NCP viruses isolated from 16 unrelated clinical cases of BDV infection resulting in fatal disease. The reactivity patterns within individual pairs of isolates taken from the same animals were in most instances very similar and in some cases indistinguishable from one another. The results demonstrate that antigenic similarity between biotypes is a consistent finding in animals dying from fatal BDV infections. In view of the wide degree between biotypes is a consistent finding in animals dying from fatal BDV infections. In view of the wide degree of variation in reactivity patterns between unrelated BDV isolates, the close antigenic similarity of CP BDV to the homologous NCP BDV of a given pair strongly suggests that CP BDV arises by mutation from NCP BDV.

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