3 resultados para polyhedra

em University of Queensland eSpace - Australia


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Baculoviruses are a group of viruses that infect invertebrates and that have been used worldwide as a biopesticide against several insect pests of the Order Lepidoptera. In Brazil, the baculovirus Spodoptera frugiperda multicapsid nucleopolyhedrovirus (SfMNPV, Baculoviridae) has been used experimentally to control S. frugiperda (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), an important insect pest of corn (maize) fields and other crops. Baculoviruses can be produced either in insect larvae or in cell culture bioreactors. A major limitation to the in vitro production of baculoviruses is the rapid generation of mutants when the virus undergoes passages in cell culture. In order to evaluate the potential of in vitro methods of producing SfMNPV on a large-scale, we have multiplied a Brazilian isolate of this virus in cell culture. Extensive formation of few polyhedra mutants was observed after only two passages in Sf9 cells.

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Serial passaging of wild-type Helicoverpa armigera, single-nucleocapsid (HaSNPV) in H. zea (HzAMI) illsect Cell Cultures results ill rapid selection for the few polyhedra (FP) phenotype. A unique HaSNPV mutant (ppC19) was isolated through plaque purification that exhibited a partial many polyhedra (MP) and FP phenotype. Oil serial passaging in suspension cell cultures, ppC19 produced fivefold more polyhedra than a typical FP mutant (FP8AS) but threefold less polyhedra than the wild-type virus. Most importantly, the polyhedra of ppC19 exhibited MP-like virion occlusion. Furthermore, ppC19 produced the same amount of budded virus (BV) as the FP mutant, which was fivefold higher than that of the wild-type virus. This selective advantage was likely to explain its relative stability in polyhedra production for six passages when compared with the wild-type Virus. However, subsequent passaging of ppC19 resulted in a steel) decline in both BV and polyhedra yields, which was also experienced by FP8AS and the wild-type virus Lit high passage numbers. Genomic deoxyribonueleic Licid profiling of the latter suggested that defective interfering particles (DIPS) were implicated in this phenomenon and represented another Undesirable mutation during serial passaging of HaSNPV Hence, a strategy to isolate HaSNPV Clones that exhibited MP-like polyhedra production but FP-like BV production, coupled with low multiplicities of infection during scale-up to avoid accumulation of DIPS, could prove commerically invaluable.