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Published online ahead of print on 16 September 2009 as doi:10.1099/vir.0.013839-0
J Gen Virol (2009), DOI 10.1099/vir.0.013839-0
© 2009 Society for General Microbiology

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A region at the left end of the fowl adenovirus 9 genome that is non-essential in vitro has consequences in vivo

Juan Carlos Corredor and Eva Nagy1

University of Guelph

1 E-mail: enagy{at}ovc.uoguelph.ca

The regions at the left and right ends of fowl adenovirus (FAdV) genomes are not well characterized in comparison to those of human adenoviruses. Using a series of deletion mutants, we analysed a 2.4-kb region near the left end of the FAdV-9 genome (nucleotides 400-2782) that contains packaging signal motifs VI and VII and open reading frames (ORFs) 0, 1, 1A, 1B, 1C and 2. Viable viruses with specific deletions in this region had wild-type characteristics in vitro, as measured by cytopathic effect, plaque morphology, virus titres and growth kinetics. However, one mutant (FAdV-9{Delta}4), which lacked these ORFs and retained the packaging motifs, did not replicate at wild-type levels in vivo, as judged in infected eggs by virus titres in allantoic fluid and in infected chickens by antibody responses, virus titres in feces and virus genome copy numbers in tissues. These findings indicate that some of the ORFs in this region, although dispensable in vitro, are important for in vivo replication of FAdV-9.

Received 27 May 2009; accepted 14 September 2009.





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