info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Apoptosis as pathogenic mechanism of infection with vesicular stomatitis virus. Evidence in primary bovine fibroblast cultures
Registro en:
0327-9545
10.32604/biocell.2009.33.121
1667-5746
Autor
López Herrera, Albeiro
Ruiz Sáenz, Julián
Góez Gazi, Yenny
Zapata Builes, Wildeman
Velilla Hernández, Paula Andrea
Arango Restrepo, Ana Eugenia
Urcuqui Inchima, Silvio
Institución
Resumen
ABSTRACT: To determine whether fibroblasts from Blanco Orejinegro cattle, exhibit any level of resistance to infection against vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) serotypes Indiana (VSV-I) or New Jersey (VSVNJ), 30 fibroblast cultures were phenotyped to evaluate their resistance/susceptibility. Thirty three % of Blanco
Orejinegro fibroblast cultures were classified as very resistant, 50% as resistant, and 17% as susceptible to
VSV-I infection, whereas 20% were classified as very resistant, 50% as resistant and 30% as susceptible to
VSV-NJ infection. Therefore, there appears to be a large variation in phenotypic polymorphism among the
fibroblasts to infection by VSV. To elucidate the mechanisms responsible for this diversity, we searched for a
possible relationship between resistance/susceptibility and production of factors with antiviral activity; however fibroblasts did not secrete factors with antiviral activity. We examined also whether apoptosis where
induced by infection and its correlation with the polymorphism of resistance/susceptibility to VSV. Using
morphological analyses, hypoploidy measurements, and level of phosphatidyl serine expression, high levels
of apoptosis were measured in VSV infected fibroblasts. However, no correlation exists between apoptosis
and the category of resistance/susceptibility to infection, indicating that apoptosis is a pathogenic mechanism
of VSV COL0012444