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Title: Field and vaccine strains of fowlpox virus carry integrated sequences from the avian retrovirus, reticuloendotheliosis virus. Author: Hertig C, Coupar BE, Gould AR, Boyle DB. Journal: Virology; 1997 Sep 01; 235(2):367-76. PubMed ID: 9281517. Abstract: For baculoviruses and herpesviruses, integration of transposons or retroviruses into the virus genome has been documented. We report here that field and vaccine strains of fowlpox virus (FPV) carry integrated sequences from the avian retrovirus, reticuloendotheliosis virus (REV). Using PCR and hybridization analysis we observed that vaccine and field strains of FPV carry REV sequences integrated into a previously uncharacterized region of the right 1/3 of the FPV genome. Long-range PCR, hybridization, and nucleotide sequence determination demonstrated that one vaccine strain (FPV S) and recently isolated field strains carry a near-full-length REV provirus. For another vaccine strain (FPV M) a rearranged remnant of the LTR was found at the same insertion site. By Western blotting and reverse transcriptase assays we were unable to demonstrate free REV in supernatants of FPV S cultures. The near-full-length REV provirus integrated into the FPV genome is infectious since FPV S DNA gave rise to REV upon transfection into chicken embryo fibroblasts. Upon infection of chickens with FPV S, all chickens developed high-titered antibodies to REV, and REV was isolated from the blood of half of the inoculated chickens. Our observations add to the list of targets for retrovirus integration into DNA virus genomes. The integration of a near-full-length, and apparently infectious, REV provirus into FPV provides additional transmission routes for the retrovirus by way of the infectious cycle of FPV, including the possibility of mechanical transmission by biting insects since FPV is believed to be transmitted by this route. For large DNA viruses, including the poxviruses, retrovirus integration with attendant possibilities of gene transduction may be an important mechanism for virus evolution, including the acquisition of cellular genes with the potential to modify virus virulence and pathogenicity.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]