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Journal of General Virology (2002), 83, 2025-2034.
© 2002 Society for General Microbiology


Animal: DNA Viruses

The expansion of a hypervariable, non-hr ori-like region in the genome of Cryptophlebia leucotreta granulovirus provides in vivo evidence for the utilization of baculovirus non-hr oris during replication

Johannes A. Jehle1

State Education and Research Center for Agriculture, Viticulture and Horticulture (SLFA), Section Biotechnological Crop Protection, Breitenweg 71, 67435 Neustadt an der Weinstraße, Germany1

Author for correspondence: Johannes A. Jehle. Fax +49 6321 671 222. e-mail jjehle.slfa-nw{at}agrarinfo.rlp.de

In this report a naturally occurring hypervariable region within the genome of different Cryptophlebia leucotreta granulovirus genotypes is characterized. The region consists of a stretch of direct repeats, short palindromes and an unusual AT-rich region. Although the organization of these repeat sequences is unique to baculoviruses, it has the structural features of a ‘non-hr’ origin of DNA replication (ori). Restriction analysis and Southern hybridization revealed that this region is expanded during virus replication. Sequence comparison of different isolated genotypes indicated that the expansion is caused by concatenation of short repeats within the region or by concatenation of the complete region. These findings indicate that the expansion of non-hr origin-like regions is not restricted to defective-interfering particles, as was found previously for baculoviruses propagated in cell culture. Moreover, it appears that non-hr complexity contributes to the natural heterogeneity and genetic plasticity of baculovirus genomes. Also, circumstantial evidence is discussed that hr oris might have developed from internal rearrangement and multiplication of a non-hr ori during baculovirus evolution.




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