MICROGLIAL INFECTION BY A NEUROVIRULENT MURINE RETROVIRUS RESULTS IN DEFECTIVE PROCESSING OF ENVELOPE PROTEIN AND INTRACELLULAR BUDDING OF VIRUS-PARTICLES
Wp. Lynch et al., MICROGLIAL INFECTION BY A NEUROVIRULENT MURINE RETROVIRUS RESULTS IN DEFECTIVE PROCESSING OF ENVELOPE PROTEIN AND INTRACELLULAR BUDDING OF VIRUS-PARTICLES, Journal of virology, 68(5), 1994, pp. 3401-3409
The observation of murine retrovirus infection of microglial cells in
brain regions expressing spongiform neurodegenerative changes suggests
that these cells may play an important role in pathogenesis. To evalu
ate this potential in vitro, murine microglial cells were infected in
mixed glial cultures with the highly neurovirulent murine retrovirus,
FrCas(E). The microglia were then isolated from the mixed cultures on
the basis of their differential adherence and shown to be approximatel
y 98% pure. The infected microglia expressed viral envelope protein at
the plasma membrane, while viral budding was primarily intracellular.
Evaluation of the viral envelope protein by immunoblotting indicated
that the immunoreactive species produced was exclusively a 90-kDa prec
ursor protein. Very little of the envelope protein was associated with
particles released from these cells, and viral titers in the culture
supernatant were low. Interestingly, these cells were still capable of
infecting permissive target cells when seeded as infectious centers.
This partially defective infection of microglial cells suggests a pote
ntial cellular means by which a neurovirulent retrovirus could disrupt
normal microglia and in turn central nervous system motor system func
tioning.