Although its dependence on the target cell type is well established, the cytopathogenicity of parvoviruses has remained elusive to date as far as its mechanism is concerned. However, indirect evidence suggested that parvoviral non‐structural (NS) proteins may be the cytotoxic effectors. In order to test this hypothesis, a molecular clone of parvovirus MVMp was modified, by replacing the P4 promoter of the NS transcription unit by the glucocorticoid‐inducible promoter of the mouse mammary tumour virus. Clones of neoplastic human cells that had incorporated this construct and that were induced to produce NS proteins by dexamethasone, showed a cytopathic effect and eventually died. Our data strongly suggest that the intracellular accumulation of parvoviral NS products jeopardizes the survival of the cells, which cannot be detected unless a threshold protein concentration is reached. Interestingly, a cell variant could be isolated which resisted dexamethasone‐induced killing, although it was fully inducible for the production of NS proteins. This variant was also unusually resistant to infection with MVMp virions, thus confirming the essential role played by the NS proteins in the parvoviral cytotoxicity and indicating that the cytocidal activity of the parvoviral NS products is modulated by cellular factors that may vary from one cell to another.
Cultures of established rat fibroblasts transformed by the avian erythroblastosis virus were more susceptible to the cytopathic effect of the autonomous parvovirus minute virus of mice, prototype strain (MVMp), than were their untransformed homologs. This effect could be ascribed to the presence of a greater fraction of cells that were sensitive to the killing action of MVMp in transformed cultures than in their normal parents. Yet, transformed and normal lines were similarly efficient in virus uptake, DNA amplification, and capsid protein synthesis. In contrast, transformants accumulated 2.5to 3-fold greater amounts of all three major MVM mRNA species and nonstructural protein than did their normal progenitors. Thus, in this system transformation-associated sensitization of cells to MVMp appears to correlate primarily with an increase in their capacity for the expression of the viral transcription unit which encodes nonstructural proteins and is controlled by the P4 promoter. Consistently, a reporter gene was expressed at a higher level by transformed versus normal cultures, when placed under the control of the MVM P4 promoter. As infectious MVMp was produced in larger amounts by transformed cultures, a late step of the parvoviral cycle, such as synthesis, encapsidation of progeny DNA, or both, was also stimulated in the transformed cells.
Transformation of FR3T3 rat fibroblasts by a c-Ha-ras oncogene but not by bovine papillomavirus type 1 is associated with an increase in the abundance of mRNAs from prototype strain MVMp of infecting minute virus of mice, an oncosuppressive parvovirus. This differential parvovirus gene expression correlates with the reported sensitization of ras-but not bovine papillomavirus type 1-transformed cells to the killing effect of
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