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A Drosophila Toolkit for the Visualization and Quantification of Viral Replication Launched from Transgenic Genomes
A Drosophila Toolkit for the Visualization and Quantification of Viral Replication Launched from Transgenic Genomes
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A Drosophila Toolkit for the Visualization and Quantification of Viral Replication Launched from Transgenic Genomes
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A Drosophila Toolkit for the Visualization and Quantification of Viral Replication Launched from Transgenic Genomes
A Drosophila Toolkit for the Visualization and Quantification of Viral Replication Launched from Transgenic Genomes

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A Drosophila Toolkit for the Visualization and Quantification of Viral Replication Launched from Transgenic Genomes
A Drosophila Toolkit for the Visualization and Quantification of Viral Replication Launched from Transgenic Genomes
Journal Article

A Drosophila Toolkit for the Visualization and Quantification of Viral Replication Launched from Transgenic Genomes

2014
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Overview
Arthropod RNA viruses pose a serious threat to human health, yet many aspects of their replication cycle remain incompletely understood. Here we describe a versatile Drosophila toolkit of transgenic, self-replicating genomes ('replicons') from Sindbis virus that allow rapid visualization and quantification of viral replication in vivo. We generated replicons expressing Luciferase for the quantification of viral replication, serving as useful new tools for large-scale genetic screens for identifying cellular pathways that influence viral replication. We also present a new binary system in which replication-deficient viral genomes can be activated 'in trans', through co-expression of an intact replicon contributing an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase. The utility of this toolkit for studying virus biology is demonstrated by the observation of stochastic exclusion between replicons expressing different fluorescent proteins, when co-expressed under control of the same cellular promoter. This process is analogous to 'superinfection exclusion' between virus particles in cell culture, a process that is incompletely understood. We show that viral polymerases strongly prefer to replicate the genome that encoded them, and that almost invariably only a single virus genome is stochastically chosen for replication in each cell. Our in vivo system now makes this process amenable to detailed genetic dissection. Thus, this toolkit allows the cell-type specific, quantitative study of viral replication in a genetic model organism, opening new avenues for molecular, genetic and pharmacological dissection of virus biology and tool development.