Research Article

Interferon susceptibility of various cell lines persistently infected with haemagglutinating virus of Japan (HVJ) -- Ito et al. 43 (1): 103 -- Journal of General Virology

Journal of General Virology 43(1):103

Abstract

Various cell lines persistently infected with para-influenza 1 virus, HVJ strain, were less susceptible to the antiviral action of interferon than the same cell lines when not infected with HVJ. When Vero cells persistently infected with a temperature-sensitive strain of HVJ were incubated at 38 degrees C, a non-permissive temperature, they became fully susceptible to interferon, whereas neither the haemadsorbing nor the cell-associated haemagglutinating activity of the virus was expressed. These findings suggest that the lowered interferon susceptibility of virus-carrier cells may be related to the maturation of virus in them. It was found that the low susceptibility of virus- carrier cells to interferon is not due to blocked adsorption of interferon or to inability of the cells to respond tointerferon. Studies with actinomycin D suggest that some step (or steps) before the synthesis of the messenger RNA for the antiviral protein is blocked.