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Journal of General Virology 1977-Jul

Relationship of a virus from Tellina tenuis to infectious pancreatic necrosis virus.

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B O Underwood
C J Smale
F Brown
B J Hill

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Abstract

The physicochemical and serological properties of a virus isolated from the bivalve mollusc, Tellina tenuis, have been examined. The virus has a diam. of 59 nm, sediments at 430S in sucrose gradients and bands at a density of I-32 g/ml in CsCl. The virus contains RNA with a mol. wt. about 2-8 X 10(6) as extimated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis but in sucrose gradients the RNA sediments at 14S. The virus RNA is resistant to ribonuclease under conditions in which ribosomal RNA and the single stranded Mengo virus RNA are completely hydrolysed. Two major polypeptides, mol. wt. 67 and 40 X 10(3), and minor polypeptide, mol. wt. 110 X 10(3), are present in the virus particle. These properties are similar to those found in different serotypes of infectious pancreatic necrosis (IPN) virus. Although there was only a very low level of cross-neutralization between Tellina virus and IPN virus. there was some cross-reaction in immune electron microscopy tests and in immunofluorescence tests with infected tissue culture cells. This cross reaction, together with the close similarity in morphology and physiochemical properties, suggests that Tellina virus and IPN virus belong to the same virus group.

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