Abstract

The characteristics of a persistent infection of L929 cells with mumps virus (MuV) is presented. The persistent infection (L-MuV cells) was regulated by interferon (IFN) produced endogenously and almost all the properties showed that the carrier culture was maintained by horizontal transmission of the virus. Small-plaque mutants, but not temperature-sensitive variants, were selected during the persistent infection. MuV released from L-MuV cells (MuV-pi) replicated efficiently in L929 cells, while infection of L929 cells with the original MuV-o resulted in an abortive infection. The efficient replication of MuV-pi in L929 cells can be explained by the findings that MuV-pi induced IFN more slowly and had lower susceptibility to IFN in L929 cells than MuV-o did. M protein was synthesized to a considerable degree in MuV-pi-infected cells, while it could not be detected in MuV-o-infected cells. By contrast, MuV-pi formed small plaques in Vero cell monolayers and the yield of MuV-pi in Vero cells was lower than that of MuV-o. M protein induced by MuV-pi decayed easily in Vero cells. M protein was considered to be a limiting factor for MuV replication in both cell lines.

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