Characterization of envelope proteins of infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus (bovine herpesvirus 1) by biochemical and immunological methods.

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RESUMO

Ten glycoproteins of molecular weights of 180,000, 150,000, 130,000, 115,000, 97,000, 77,000, 74,000, 64,000, 55,000, and 45,000 (designated as 180K, 150K, etc.) and a single nonglycosylated 107,000-molecular-weight (107K) protein were quantitatively removed from purified bovine herpesvirus 1 (BHV-1) virions by detergent treatment. Immunoprecipitations with monospecific and monoclonal antibodies showed that three sets of coprecipitating glycoproteins, 180K/97K, 150K/77K, and 130K/74K/55K, were the major components of the BHV-1 envelope. These glycoproteins were present in the envelope of the virion and on the surface of BHV-1-infected cells and reacted with neutralizing monoclonal and monospecific antibodies. Antibodies to 150K/77K protein had the largest proportion of virus-neutralizing antibodies, followed by antibodies to 180K/97K protein. Monoclonal antibodies to 130K/74K/55K protein were neutralizing but only in the presence of complement; however, monospecific antisera produced with 55K protein did not have neutralizing activity. Analysis under nonreducing conditions showed that the 74K and 55K proteins interact through disulfide bonds to form the 130K molecule. Partial proteolysis studies showed that the 180K protein was a dimeric form of the 97K protein and that the 150K protein was a dimer of the 77K protein, but these dimers were not linked by disulfide bonds. The 107K protein was not glycosylated and induced antibodies that did not neutralize BHV-1. The 64K protein was not precipitated by anti-BHV-1 convalescent antisera, and monospecific antisera to this protein precipitated several polypeptides from uninfected cell lysates, suggesting that 64K is a protein of cellular origin associated with the BHV-1 virion envelope.

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