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      Smallpox virus plaque phenotypes: genetic, geographical and case fatality relationships.

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          Abstract

          Smallpox (infection with Orthopoxvirus variola) remains a feared illness more than 25 years after its eradication. Historically, case-fatality rates (CFRs) varied between outbreaks (<1 to approximately 40 %), the reasons for which are incompletely understood. The extracellular enveloped virus (EEV) form of orthopoxvirus progeny is hypothesized to disseminate infection. Investigations with the closely related Orthopoxvirus vaccinia have associated increased comet formation (EEV production) with increased mouse mortality (pathogenicity). Other vaccinia virus genetic manipulations which affect EEV production inconsistently support this association. However, antisera against vaccinia virus envelope protect mice from lethal challenge, further supporting a critical role for EEV in pathogenicity. Here, we show that the increased comet formation phenotypes of a diverse collection of variola viruses associate with strain phylogeny and geographical origin, but not with increased outbreak-related CFRs; within clades, there may be an association of plaque size with CFR. The mechanisms for variola virus pathogenicity probably involves multiple host and pathogen factors.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J. Gen. Virol.
          The Journal of general virology
          Microbiology Society
          0022-1317
          0022-1317
          Apr 2009
          : 90
          : Pt 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA. vao9@cdc.gov
          Article
          vir.0.008169-0
          10.1099/vir.0.008169-0
          19264626
          fc47713c-5601-4f68-8d7c-170befca2b7b
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