Mutual Exclusion Occurs in a Chlorella
Transcription
Mutual Exclusion Occurs in a Chlorella
J. gen. Virol. (1989), 70, 1829-1836. Printed in Great Britain 1829 Key words: mutual exclusion/Chlorella viruses/endonucleases Mutual Exclusion Occurs in a Chlorella-like Green Alga Inoculated with Two Viruses By T H O M A S E. C H A S E , ' ~ J E N N I F E R A. NELSON, D W I G H T E. B U R B A N K AND J A M E S L. V A N E T T E N * Department o f Plant Pathology, University o f Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska 68583-0722, U.S.A. (Accepted 22 March 1989) SUMMARY Progeny viruses resulting from dual inoculations with different and near-isogenic viruses of a Chlorella-like green alga were distinguished by immunoblotting. Plaques arising from single cells inoculated with two viruses usually contained only one of the viruses. Thus the viruses mutually exclude one another. In some combinations the ratio of viruses (as infective centres) recovered differed significantly from the input ratio. INTRODUCTION Thirty large (150 to 190 nm in diameter), polyhedral, dsDNA-containing, plaque-forming viruses which replicate in a unicellular, eukaryotic Chlorella-like green alga have been partially characterized (for review see Van Etten et al., 1986a, 1987, 1988). These viruses can be distinguished by differences in plaque size, antigenic specificity, D N A restriction fragment patterns and the nature and abundance of methylated bases in their genomic D N A s (Schuster et al., 1986). Each of the virus D N A s contains 5-methylcytosine (5mC); the concentration of 5mC varies from 0.1 ~ to 47"5~o of the total cytosine residues. In addition, 18 of the 30 virus D N A s also contain N6-methyladenine (6mA); the concentration of 6 m A varies from 1.45 ~o to 37 ~ of the'total adenine residues. At least some of these viruses code for D N A methyltransferases and D N A site-specific (restriction) endonucleases (Xia & Van Etten, 1986; Xia et al., 1986a, b, 1987a, b, 1988; N a r v a et al., 1987). This report describes dual inoculations of Chlorella N C 6 4 A with genetically distinct viruses as well as nearly isogenic viruses. These experiments were conducted for two reasons: first, to determine whether the algal host can support simultaneous replication of two different viruses and secondly, to determine whether one function of the site-specific endonucleases is to exclude other viruses. The results indicate that usually only one virus replicates in an individual cell inoculated with two distinct viruses, i.e. the viruses exhibit mutual exclusion. However, the sitespecific endonucleases are probably not solely, if at all, responsible for exclusion. METHODS Culture conditions. The growth of the host Chlorella strain NC64A on MBBM medium, the production of the viruses (listed in Table 1), and the procedures used to measure virus adsorption and virus growth have been described (Van Etten et al., 1983a, b; Schuster et al., 1986). In the double infection experiments 10 ml of actively growing Chlorella cells (1.6 x 107 to 1-8 × 107 cells/ml) were inoculated simultaneously with two viruses at an m.o.i, of 10 to 35 (values for specific experiments are listed in the tables) and incubated for 1 h. Cells were separated from unattached virus by centrifugation (3000 g for 5 min), washed several times in MBBM, resuspended in MBBM at their original concentration and then titrated for infective centres as previously described (Van Etten et al., 1983a, b). At the m.o.i, used at least 98 ~ of the cells should be infected with both viruses within 30 rain assuming infection follows a Poisson distribution; when cells w e r e inoculated at this m.o.i, with each virus alone essentially all the cells were infected. t Present address: Pacific Southwest Forest and Range Experiment Station, 1960 Addison Street, P.O. Box 245, Berkeley, California 94701, U.S.A. 0000-8896 © 1989 SGM Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 78.47.27.170 On: Thu, 20 Oct 2016 04:06:24 1830 T. E. CHASE AND OTHERS T a b l e 1. Properties o f the C h t o r e l l a N C 6 4 A viruses used in this study Virus Class* Replication time (h)t NE-8D NYb-I CA-4B NY-2C NC- 1D PBCV- 1 EPA1 IL-3A SC- 1B NC- 1A NC- 1B NY-2B 1 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 5 6 7 9 4-9 4-9 4-9 4-9 4-9 4-9 4-9 44 8-15 4-9 4-9 9-18 Reacts with antiserum to Site-specific r ~------------~ endonuclease PBCV-1 NY-2C produced Yes Yes Yes No No Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No Yes Yes No No No No No No Yes Sensitivity of virus DNA to site-specific endonuclease r * CviAI CviBI CviJI CviAI CviAI CviJI CviBI Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Yes No No No No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes No No * The criteria used to classify the viruses are in Schuster et al. (1986). t The first number is when progeny viruses are first released and the second number when release is complete. Chlorella cells were also inoculated with one virus before inoculation with a second virus. In these experiments the first virus was incubated with the cells for 30 min, unattached virus was removed, and then the second virus was added. After removal of the unattached second virus 30 rain later, cells were washed and titrated for infective centres as described above. The effect on burst size of inoculating the host with two viruses was determined by allowing the viruses (m.o.i. of 20 for cells inoculated with one virus or 10 each for cells inoculated with two viruses) to adsorb to the host (1.7 × 107 cells/ml) for 1 h. The inoculated cells were pelleted by centrifugation, suspended in 10 ml of MBBM, incubated for 2 days and titrated. The burst size was calculated by dividing the total p.f.u, by the number of cells. Irnmunoblotting. Viruses in the infective centres (plaques) were identified using the Promega immunoblotting system. Duplicate plaque lifts on nitrocellulose filters were made after incubating the titration plates for 3 to 4 days and then chilling the plates at 4 °C for several hours. The filters were incubated for 30 min in TBST buffer (1% bovine serum albumin, 10 mM-Tris-HC1, 150 mM-NaCI, 0.05 % Tween 20, pH 8.0) to reduce non-specific binding to the filters. Individual filters were then incubated for 30 min with primary antiserum, usually raised against virus PBCV-I or NY-2C, at a dilution of 1:750 in TBST buffer. The filters were rinsed in TBST buffer (three times, 10 rain each) and then incubated in the secondary antiserum (goat anti-rabbit IgG-alkaline phosphatase conjugate, diluted 1:7500 in TBST buffer) for 30 min. Filters were rinsed in TBST buffer (three times, 10 rain each) and incubated in a reaction mixture containing 40 mM-nitro blue tetrazolium, 40 mM-5-bromo-4-chloro-3indolyl phosphate in alkaline phosphatase buffer (100 mM-Tris-HCl pH 9-5, 100 mM-NaCI, 5 mM-MgC12). Filters were incubated until the plaques were clearly visible (purple colour) and the reaction was terminated by placing the filters in stop buffer (20 mM-Tris-HCl pH 8-0, 5 mM-EDTA). One-hundred to 400 plaques were counted in a typical experiment. Analysis of individual infective centres. Plaques arising from infective centres were removed with sterile toothpicks and transferred to 200 ~tl of 50 mM-Tris-HC1 pH 7.5. A portion of this virus suspension was titrated, plaques were lifted and virus composition was determined by immunoblotting. Fifty ml of actively growing Chlorella NC64A cells was also inoculated with a second portion of the virus suspension. After overnight incubation, virus was pelleted from the lysate by centrifugation (Van Etten et al., 1983b) and suspended in 1 ml of 50 mM-Tris-HCl pH 7.5, 10 mM-MgC12 containing 55 p.g DNase I. After incubation at 22 °C for I h to digest contaminating host DNA, 18 ~tl of 0.5 M-EDTA was added. The virus was disrupted by incubating at 60 °C for 1 h with 350 ~tg of autodigested proteinase K (37 °C, 1 h) and 90 pl of sodium N-lauroylsarcosine. Protein was removed by several extractions with phenol and chloroform : isoamyl alcohol (25 : 1 v/v). The aqueous phase was adjusted to 0.2 M-sodium acetate and DNA was precipitated with ethanol. The DNA was washed several times with 70~ ethanol, suspended in 10mM-Tris-HC1, 1 mM-EDTA, pH8, and treated with BamHI or EcoRI restriction endonucleases as recommended by the suppliers. Other procedures. Attachment rates of the viruses were determined as described previously (Van Etten et al., 1983 b). Spontaneous serotype mutants of PBCV- 1 were isolated by treating I x 109 p.f.u, of PBCV- 1 wth PBCV- 1 antiserum (1:100 dilution) for 30 min, removing agglutinated virus by centrifugation (3000 g for 5 rain) and then Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 78.47.27.170 On: Thu, 20 Oct 2016 04:06:24 Mutual exclusion of Chlorella viruses 1831 Fig. 1. Immunoblotting of duplicate plaque lifts of a titration plate containing a mixture of PBCV-1 and NY-2C viruses. The lift on the left was treated with PBCV-1 antiserum and the one on the right with NY-2C antiserum. Plaques that produced a dark colour with PBCV-1 antiserum had a light colour with NY-2C antiserum and vice versa. plating the supernatant fraction. Under these conditions about 1 x 103 plaques were recovered; viruses purified from these plaques were insensitive to PBCV-1 antiserum. Polyclonal antisera to PBCV-1, NY-2C and EPA 1 were raised against purified viruses as described previously (Van Etten et al., 1982). Most experiments were repeated two or more times and representative results are reported. RESULTS Immunoblotting procedure Immunoblots of duplicate plaque lifts from a titration plate containing a mixture of PBCV-1 and NY-2C viruses are shown in Fig. 1. The blot pictured on the left was reacted with PBCV-1 antiserum and the one on the right with NY-2C antiserum. All plaques were detected on both filters but plaques that produced a dark colour with PBCV-1 antiserum had a lighter colour with NY-2C antiserum and vice versa. To confirm plaque identity, virus D N A was isolated from 20 plaques identified either as PBCV-1 or NY-2C and digested with BamHI. In every instance the D N A restriction pattern confirmed the identity. Thus the immunoblotting technqiue clearly distinguished the two viruses. Progeny from cells inoculated with PBCV-1 and NY-2C Viruses PBCV-1 and NY-2C were chosen for the first dual inoculation experiment because they adsorb to and replicate at similar rates in Chlorella NC64A. Nearly every infective centre plaque resulting after inoculation with PBCV-1 and NY-2C (m.o.i. of 12 for each virus) was unambiguously identified as either PBCV-1 (121 plaques) or NY-2C (70 plaques) by immunoblotting. Two of the 193 infective centres examined a p p e a r e d to contain a mixture of the two viruses because they were intermediate in colour intensity with both antisera. To check the accuracy of the initial scoring of these plaques, the virus compositions of 36 infective centres (35 plaques identified as either PBCV-1 or NY-2C and one mixed plaque) were analysed further by titrating and immunoblotting and by examining D N A restriction patterns. Thirty-two of 36 plaques were identified correctly in the initial screening (Table 2). Four of the 35 infective centres initially classified as containing only one virus contained small amounts (1 to 1 2 ~ ) of the other virus. The plaque identified as ' m i x e d ' contained both NY-2C ( 2 3 ~ ) and PBCV-1 (77 ~). Thus the immunoblotting procedure correctly identified the virus composition of the plaques 89 9/ooof the time. W e conclude that a cell inoculated with both PBCV-1 and NY-2C usually produces progeny of one but not both viruses, i.e. most of the time the viruses mutually exclude one another. Furthermore, PBCV-1 has a slightly better chance of replicating in a given cell than NY-2C if Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 78.47.27.170 On: Thu, 20 Oct 2016 04:06:24 1832 T. E. C H A S E A N D O T H E R S T a b l e 2. Scoring of plaques, titrated single plaque isolates and DNA restriction patterns from infective centres resulting from a dual inoculation with PBCV-1 and NY-2C* Scoring of plaque Viruses in the plaques c A • PBCV-1 (~) NY-2C (~) NY-2C PBCV-1 PBCV-1 PBCV-1 Mixed 1.5 89.7 88-3 98-3 77-0 98.5 10.3 11.6 1.7 23.0 DNA restriction profile NY-2C Mixed Mixed PBCV-1 Mixed * Thirty-six infective centres were picked from cells simultaneously inoculated with NY-2C and PBCV-I. Viruses from each of these plaques were titrated and scored by immunoblotting. The restriction patterns from the DNAs were also examined. Of the 36 plaques examined 15 contained only PBCV-1 and 16 contained only NY-2C and were scored correctly by immunoblotting. The compositions of the other five plaques are shown in the table. T a b l e 3. Progeny (infective centres) from Chlorella NC64A cells simultaneously inoculated with two viruses Viruses A+B Input ratio PBCV-1 + NY-2C PBCV-1 + NY-2C PBCV-1 + NC-1D NYb-lt + NC-1D NE-8D + NC-1D CA-4B + NC-1D IL-3At + NY-2C IL-3At + NY-2C SC-1B + NY-2C NC-1A + NY-2C NC-1B + NY-2C NC-1B + NY-2C SC-1B t + NY-2B 1: 1 1:3 1: 1 1:1 1:1 1: 1 1: 1 1:3 1:2 1:1 3:2 2 :1 1: 1 M.o.i. Outcome (A : B : M) proportion* Percentage mixed 24 18 20 27 20 26 16 27 33 11 16 35 12 121:70:2 55:94:4 61:39 : 1 220:56:17 81:209:l 123:90 : 1 247: 36 : 3 310:69:4 146:131:4 69:28:2 53:41:0 105 : 87:0 57 : 15 : 1 1-0 2.6 1.0 5.8 0-3 0.5 1.0 1-0 1.4 2.0 0 0 1.4 * Numbers refer to plaques from infective centres scored as containing virus A, virus B or both viruses (M). t The underlined viruses dominated (> 3:1) in the dual inoculation. the m.o.i, are identical. C h a n g i n g the m.o.i, ratio o f P B C V - 1 to N Y - 2 C to 1:3 increased the fraction of N Y - 2 C infective centres (Table 3, line 2). Cells inoculated with other virus combinations T h e infective centres f r o m dual inoculations w i t h n i n e o t h e r virus c o m b i n a t i o n s were analysed (Table 3). W i t h the e x c e p t i o n o f viruses SC-1B a n d N Y - 2 B all of the viruses adsorbed to cells and replicated in t h e m at about the s a m e rate as PBCV-1 (Table 1). T h e s e e x p e r i m e n t s led to several conclusions. First, all virus c o m b i n a t i o n s s h o w e d mutual exclusion. T h e highest percentage o f plaques c o n t a i n i n g virus mixtures was 6 ~ (NYb-1 and N C - 1 D , T a b l e 3, line 4); m o r e typically 1 to 2 ~ o f the plaques c o n t a i n e d b o t h viruses. Secondly, the ratio of infective centres often differed f r o m the m.o.i, ratio of the inoculating viruses but usually by no m o r e t h a n two- to three-fold. T h e most notable exceptions i n v o l v e d viruses I L - 3 A and N Y - 2 C where I L - 3 A d o m i n a t e d (approx. 7 : 1 ; T a b l e 3, line 7), NYb-1 and N C - I D where NYb-1 d o m i n a t e d (approx. 4 : 1 ; T a b l e 3, line 4), and SC-1B and N Y - 2 B w h e r e SC-1B d o m i n a t e d (approx. 4 • 1 ; T a b l e 3, line 13). A l t e r i n g the m.o.i, ratio in favour o f N Y - 2 C in the I L - 3 A and N Y - 2 C e x p e r i m e n t slightly affected the infective centres ratio but I L - 3 A still d o m i n a t e d (Table 3, line 8). Thirdly, a faster replicating virus did not necessarily p r e d o m i n a t e o v e r a slower replicating virus. F o r example, N Y - 2 C replicates a b o u t twice as fast as SC-1B and yet the ratio of infective centres after Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 78.47.27.170 On: Thu, 20 Oct 2016 04:06:24 Mutual exclusion o f Chlorella viruses 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 1833 13 14 23.1 - - 9"4 J 6.7-- 4.4-- 2"3~ 2.0-- 0.56 Fig. 2. A comparison of PBCV-1 DNA (even-numbered lanes) and a serotype mutant of PBCV-1 (EPA1) DNA (odd-numbered lanes) after treatment with PstI (lanes 1, 2), HindlII (lanes 3, 4), BamHI (lanes 5, 6), EcoRI (lanes 7, 8), Sinai (lanes 9, 10), MboI (lanes 11, 12) and DpnI (lanes 13, 14). EPA1 DNA lacks one BamHI fragment (arrowhead, lane 6) and one EcoRI fragment (arrowhead, lane 8). Lambda DNA HindlII fragments were used as size markers. inoculation with these two viruses was about 1 : 1 (Table 3, line 9) even though the NY-2C m.o.i. was twice that of SC-1B in this particular experiment. Cells inoculated with near-isogenic viruses The preceding experiments used viruses which not only contained different concentrations of methylated bases in their D N A s but which had, necessarily, different serotypes. To determine whether closely related viruses exclude one another, a stable spontaneous mutant of PBCV-1 (named EPA1) that did not react with PBCV-1 antiserum was isolated. Except for the loss of a single PBCV-1 BamHI fragment (arrowhead in lane 6, Fig. 2) and EcoRI fragment (arrowhead in lane 8, Fig. 2), D N A from EPA1 was indistinguishable from that of PBCV-1 as determined by restriction patterns and sensitivity to seven restriction endonucleases (Fig. 2). EPA1 adsorbed to and replicated in host cells at the same rate as PBCV-1, and most importantly antiserum to EPA1 did not react with PBCV-1 (data not shown). Progeny from dual inoculations with EPA1 and PBCV-1 serotypes are reported in Table 4. Mutual exclusion occurred in all experiments including dual inoculations with EPA1 and Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 78.47.27.170 On: Thu, 20 Oct 2016 04:06:24 1834 T. E. C H A S E AND OTHERS T a b l e 4. Progeny (infective centres) from Chlorella NC64A cells simultaneously inoculated with a serotype mutant ofPBCV-1 (EPA1) and a second virus Virus A+B Input ratio M.o.i. PBCV-1 + EPA1 PBCV-1 + EPA1 PBCV-1 + EPA1 NE-8D + EPA1 IL-3At + EPA1 NC-1A + EPA1 1:1 1:3 5:2 1:1 1:1 1:2 20 17 43 18 19 32 Outcome (A : B : M) proportion 57:69 : 1 78:136:6 85:20 : 1 75:100:0 129:5:0 67:96:6 * Numbers refer to plaques from infective centres scored as containing virus A, virus B or both viruses (M). t The underlined virus dominated (> 3:1) in the dual inoculation. T a b l e 5. The burst size o f C h l o r e l l a NC64A inoculated with one or two viruses Virus Burst size* A r A, • A B PBCV-1 PBCV-1 NYb-1 NE-8D CA-4B IL-3A SC-1B NC-1A NC-1B SC-1B NY-2C NC-1D NC-1D NC-1D NC-1D NY-2C NY-2C NY-2C NY-2C NY-2B rA 227 227 336 318 89 250 174 406 295 218 B A+o 164 292 292 292 292 164 164 164 164 93 176 241 88 94 111 318 79 160 155 84 * A and B refer to the first and second viruses, respectively, listed in columns 1 and 2. T a b l e 6. Progeny (infective centres) from Chlorella NC64A cells inoculated with one virus 30 min before inoculation with a second virus* First virus Second virus PBCV-1 NY-2C Simultaneous NY-2C PBCV-1 Outcome (PBCV- 1 : NY-2C) 681 : 138 167:680 124 : 63 * The m.o.i, was 10 for each virus. PBCV-1 (Table 4, lines 1 to 3). R e c o v e r y ratios were usually related to the m.o.i, ratios. O n e e x c e p t i o n was the d o m i n a n c e o f I L - 3 A (Table 4, line 5). T h e virus identities in the infective centres resulting f r o m inoculation with E P A 1 and PBCV-1 a n d E P A 1 and N C - 1 A were confirmed by titrating and i m m u n o b l o t t i n g virus p r o g e n y f r o m these plaques. Effect of dual inoculations on burst size T h e burst sizes f r o m cells inoculated w i t h one or two viruses were also determined. As s h o w n in T a b l e 5 the burst size was reduced slightly for s o m e c o m b i n a t i o n s but, in general, dual inoculations did not affect burst size. Exclusion is probably an early event T o d e t e r m i n e w h e t h e r m u t u a l exclusion o c c u r r e d early in the virus replication cycle, P B C V - I was i n c u b a t e d w i t h cells for 30 m i n before inoculation w i t h N Y - 2 C and vice versa. T h e virus a d d e d first d o m i n a t e d in these situations (Table 6). T o d e t e r m i n e w h e t h e r infection by one virus Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 78.47.27.170 On: Thu, 20 Oct 2016 04:06:24 Mutual exclusion of Chlorella viruses 1835 prevented attachment of a second virus, algae were infected with PBCV-1 (m.o.i. of 10) and the cells were collected at 1 h after infection. The cells were resuspended in MBBM and tested for their ability to adsorb PBCV-1 and NY-2C. Both viruses attached equally well to uninfected and infected cells (data not shown). We conclude from these experiments that exclusion is probably an early event. However, it is not at the level of virus attachment. DISCUSSION Plaque lifts can be combined with immunoblotting to identify Chlorella NC64A virus serotypes rapidly in plaques although not if a plaque contains a mixture of two viruses. Plaques containing 9 0 ~ of one virus and 10~ of another will probably be identified as containing only one virus, i.e. be misidentified. Plaques containing two viruses at a ratio of 3 : 1 will be identified as a mixture. The immunoblotting procedure was used to study the progeny resulting from Chlorella cells inoculated with two viruses. Approximately 9 0 ~ of the time only one virus replicated in a cell inoculated with two viruses, i.e. mutual exclusion occurred. The estimation that both viruses replicate in 10~ of the cells may be artificially high. Vegetative cells of Chlorella NC64A increase in size and typically produce four progeny cells (called autospores) inside the mother cell. If different viruses infect different autospores in a single mother cell, the result would be an infective centre containing both viruses. If this occurs, the infecting virus would have to penetrate two walls (the mother cell wall and the autospore wall). The results allow us to make some general comments about Chlorella NC64A cells inoculated with two viruses. (i) Infection of the alga by one virus does not prevent attachment of a second virus. (ii) Cells inoculated with one virus 30 min before inoculation with a second virus will preferentially replicate the first virus. Thus the mechanism responsible for mutual exclusion probably occurs within the first 30 to 45 min after infection. (iii) A faster growing virus does not necessarily predominate in a dual inoculation since SC-1B competed very well with NY-2C (Table 3, line 9) even though it replicated considerably slower than NY-2C. (iv) Some viruses dominate in certain combinations. For example, IL-3A dominates NY-2C and PBCV-1 (EPA1). (v) It is unlikely that the virus-encoded site-specific endonucleases play a major role in mutual exclusion. If they did, certain viruses should dominate in particular combinations. For example, viruses PBCV-I and NC-1A produce the site-specific endonucleases CviAI and CviBI, respectively (Xia et al., 1986a, b). In vitro, CviBI digests PBCV-1 D N A but CviAI does not digest N C - I A DNA. Consequently if the site-specific endonucleases are involved in exclusion, inoculation with both NC-1A and PBCV-1 (EPA1) should yield predominantly NC1A. This did not occur (Table 4, line 6). It is possible, however, that PBCV-1 and N C - I A code for additional site-specific endonucleases that have not been detected. Finding that exclusion also occurs in ceils inoculated with the isogenic viruses PBCV- 1 and EPA 1, which have the same site-specific endonuclease, also indicates that these enzymes are not involved in exclusion. Mutual exclusion was first described by Delbr~ick (1945) for T1 and T7 bacteriophages. When cells were inoculated with both T1 and T7, 3 3 ~ of the cells yielded only T1, whereas the remaining 6 6 ~ yielded only T7. Cells producing both viruses were not recovered. Further experiments with closely related coliphage in the T-even series (reviewed in Doermann, 1983) led to the general conclusion that unrelated phages usually exclude or partially exclude, whereas closely related phages (e.g. those differing by only a few mutational steps) are compatible. The present results demonstrate that mutual exclusion also occurs in a lower eukaryotic host-virus system. Mutual exclusion occurred between viruses which differed from each other in several ways, including D N A restriction patterns and levels of D N A methylation. In this respect the results are similar to those obtained for coliphage. A surprising result was the mutual exclusion between PBCV-1 and its mutant derivative EPA1. It will be interesting to determine how mutual exclusion occurs between two viruses which are essentially identical except for mutations in genes encoding capsid antigenic determinants. These data also suggest that genetic recombination between Chlorella NC64A viruses is relatively rare although Tessman (1985) recovered wild-type recombinants from temperature-sensitive mutants of PBCV-1 but at low (1 to 2 ~ ) frequencies. This low frequency of recombinants could result from mutual exclusion. Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 78.47.27.170 On: Thu, 20 Oct 2016 04:06:24 1836 T. E. C H A S E A N D O T H E R S We thank K e n N a r v a for help with the immunoblotting, Ellen Ball for providing the virus antisera, and Les Lane, Myron Brakke and Irwin T e s s m a n for helpful discussions and critically reading the manuscript. 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