Dodds J A
Department of Plant Pathology and Botany, Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, P.O. Box 1106, New Haven, Connecticut 06504, USA.
Virology. 1980 Nov;107(1):1-12. doi: 10.1016/0042-6822(80)90267-6.
A hypovirulent strain (H1) of Endothia parasitica. (EP 113) contained enough dsRNA, 7 mug/g, to be detected in unconcentrated nucleic acid extracts. Two to five (the most common number) major dsRNA components (MW = 4.4-6.2 x 10(6)) were detected in different preparations. A distinctive pattern of minor dsRNA components (MW < 4.0 x 10(6)) was also detected. Single-stranded RNA (MW = 2.0-3.1 x 10(6)) was not detected in nucleic acid samples which contained readily detectable amounts of dsRNA. Most of the dsRNA was associated with pleiomorphic club-shaped particles up to 300 nm long with spherical heads (diameter = 50-90 nm). The particles were purified from clarified extracts by polyethylene glycol precipitation and differential centrifugation. They were resolved as broad bands in rate-zonal (S(20,W) = 180 S) and equilibrium (buoyant density = 1.28 g/cm(3) in CsCl) density gradient centrifugation and had a nucleoprotein-like absorbance profile (260 nm/280 nmn ratio = 1.23-1.28) with unusual absorbance peaks at 260, 269, 280, and 293 ran. The partially purified preparation also contained large membrane-like bodies (buoyant density = 1.23 g/cm(3)). Similarly prepared extracts from a virulent strain (V) lacked dsRNA, club-shaped particles, and large membrane-like bodies. All these components were also detected in extracts of a hypovirulent strain (H2) generated by conversion of the virulent strain with strain EP 113. The appearance and properties of the club-shaped particle suggest that it is either a new and pleiomorphic type of fungal virus-like particle or a site of accumulation of a complex dsRNA.