Summary
Phenotypic profiles of the VP2 protein of isolates of bluetongue virus serotype 1 (BTV-1) collected from Queensland and the Northern Territory, Australia, between 1979 and 1986 were analysed using neutralising monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) raised to the prototype isolate of Australian BTV-1 collected in the Northern Territory in 1979. Two distinct profiles were found. Northern Territory isolates exhibited the prototype profile, yet those from Queensland had a significantly different (‘resistant’) profile. Nucleotide sequencing of gene segment 2 from both groups of isolates was undertaken. When the nucleotide sequences of isolates from a later period in each State were analysed (1997-2001), all exhibited the ‘resistant’ profile. Thus, a novel VP2 phenotype, already in existence in Queensland, had supplanted a pre-existing VP2 phenotype in the Northern Territory between the two periods. Furthermore, amino acid differences between the resistant and prototype VP2 proteins were analogous to amino acid substitutions known to be associated with neutralisation resistance. The host immune response may therefore have contributed to selection of the ‘resistant’ phenotype.
Keywords
Australia, Bluetongue, Monoclonal antibody, Neutralisation, Nucleotide, Phenotype, Profile, Resistance, Sequence, Selection, Viral protein 2.
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