Abstract
The cytolytic effect of the autonomous parvovirus minute virus of mice, prototype strain (MVMp), was studied in cultures of ts 339/NRK rat cells that display a temperature-sensitive transformed phenotype as a result of their transformation with a Rous sarcoma virus strain matured in the v-src oncogene. A shift from restrictive (39.5 degrees C) to permissive (34.5 degrees C) temperature was associated with a marked sensitization of these cells to killing by MVMp. In contrast, ts 339/NRK cell derivatives supertransformed with a wild-type src oncogene were sensitive to MVMp at both temperatures, suggesting that the expression of a functional oncogene product may determine, at least in part, the extent of the parvoviral cytopathic effect. Although ts 339/NRK cells were quite resistant to parvoviral attack at 39.5 degrees C, they were similarly proficient in MVMp uptake, viral DNA and protein synthesis, and infectious particle production at both permissive and restrictive temperatures. Consistently, electron microscopic examination of infected ts 339/NRK cultures incubated at 39.5 degrees C revealed the presence, in the majority of the cells, of numerous full and empty virions that were predominantly located in autophagic-type vacuoles. Thus, in this system, the reversion of transformed and MVMp-sensitive phenotypes appears to correlate with the setting up of a noncytocidal mode of parvovirus production. These results raise the possibility that the physiological state of host cells may affect their susceptibility to parvoviruses by modulating not only their capacity for virus replication but also cellular processes controlling the cytopathic effect of viral products.
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