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Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg., 32(6), 1983, pp. 1422-1428
Copyright © 1983 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

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A Variant of la Crosse Virus Attenuated for Aedes Triseriatus Mosquitoes

Barry R. Miller
Department of Entomology, 320 Morrill Hall, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801

A plaque-purified variant was cloned from prototype La Crosse (LAC) virus. This variant (PP-31) was lethal to suckling mice by the intracerebral route, produced "wild-type" plaques in Vero and BHK-21 cells, and grew to high titers (>107 PFU/ml) in suckling mice and in cell culture. The variant was able to orally infect the vector, Aedes triseriatus; however, it was unable to escape infected midgut cells and disseminate to secondary target organs. Large, atypical, focal accumulations of viral antigen were detected in these midguts by immunofluorescence. Orally infected mosquitoes were unable to transmit virus by bite to suckling mice or vertically to their progeny. Even after inoculation of the variant virus into mosquitoes, there appeared to be a restriction on cell to cell virus movement. The role such variants may play in the modulation of infection in an arthropod vector is discussed.

Accepted for publication April 21, 1983.







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Copyright © 1983 by the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.