Regulation of multiple infection in alphabaculoviruses: critical factors that determine success

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Date
2014Author
Version
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Type
Tesis doctoral / Doktoretza tesia
Impact
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nodoi-noplumx
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Abstract
This thesis is focused in the ability of different baculovirus species to coinfect
a particular host. I investigate whether the co-occlusion of different species is
allowed and if it confers some advantage to the viruses, like the generation and
maintenance of the viral heterogeneity in ecosystems where two or more virus
species are present. Furthermore, as co-infection with different species ...
[++]
This thesis is focused in the ability of different baculovirus species to coinfect
a particular host. I investigate whether the co-occlusion of different species is
allowed and if it confers some advantage to the viruses, like the generation and
maintenance of the viral heterogeneity in ecosystems where two or more virus
species are present. Furthermore, as co-infection with different species implies
sharing of host resources, we would like to explore the mechanisms (if any)
regulating co-infection. Does a virus present in a given cell produce a signal that
blocks other virus infection? Can this signal discriminate in function of the
relatedness of the genomes? The existence of a temporal window that may allow
coinfections and after which the organism becomes refractive to a second infection
was analyzed, both in vivo and in vitro. This work also studies, in depth, the factors
involved in the establishment of the block to infection by the second virus, such as
temporal influences or cellular rearrangements. In a second part, the complete
sequence of a Nicaraguan isolate of the SfMNPV is shown and compared with the
sequences of this virus that had been previously published. In order to increase our
understanding of the virus and its evolution and adaptation to its natural host, we
studied the functionality of a unique gene present only in SfMNPV (sf32), some
genes suggested to have a host-dependent function (sf68, sf95 and sf138) and a
gene undergoing positive selection (sf122). [--]
Subject
Alphabaculoviruses,
Multiple infections,
SfMNPV
Departament
Universidad Pública de Navarra. Departamento de Producción Agraria /
Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa. Nekazaritza Ekoizpena Saila