Cell fusion was induced by brain extracts containing the scrapie virus and the virus of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. The assay involved quantitation of colony-forming ability in a double selection system, standardized against fusion induced by Sendai virus. Correlation between the logarithm of virus dilution and the hybrid colony number gave similar curves for scrapie virus and Sendai virus. Fusion induction may explain some aspects of pathogenesis in these diseases and provide a potential in vitro assay.
Rifampin reversibly inhibits the intracellular replication of a VSV mutant, whereas a revertant variant selected from this viral population, as well as the wild strain, are not affected by this drug. Rifampin inhibits transcriptase activity of the sensitive mutant only and, consequently, total viral RNA synthesis decreases significantly in the cells.
A rifampin-susceptible strain (VSV Rif+) was selected from the wild vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) population unsusceptible to rifampin. The VSV Rif+ was blocked in its intracellular replication in the presence of rifampin. In cells, rifampin affected primarily VSV Rif+ transcription, but to a different extent than in a cell-free system. In addition, a decrease in the amount of VSV Rif+ protein M was detected, linked to a stimulation of protein NS. In the absence of rifampin, protein M, although synthesized, was not immediately incorporated into the cell membrane. An interpretation of these observations is proposed.
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