Characterization of virus-like particles produced by an influenza A virus

1979 
The influenza strain 413 1,1 segregated as a stable recombinant during passage of the isolate 19/N which was obtained after double infection of chick embryo fibroblasts by virus N and the fowl plague virus (FPV) mutantsts 19. Its gene constellation was determined by molecular hybridization. Upon infection of chick embryo cells by this recombinant strain, two particle populations of high (H) and low (L) buoyant densities were produced. By biological and biochemical parameters, the H-population (δ=1.22 g/cm3) cannot be distinguished from standard infectious influenza virus. In contrast, the noninfectious L-particles (δ=1.14 g/cm3) lack all virus-specific glycoproteins (HA, NA) as well as the matrix protein M and are visualized by electron microscopy as spikeless particles. Significant changes in the quantitative composition of the phospholipid bilayer are evident as compared to the H-particles. In addition to the previously characterized eight genes both populations contain a variety of smaller RNA fragments which hybridize with complementary RNA and presumably represent degradation products of full-length genes.
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