A nanoluciferase-tagged Schmallenberg virus (SBV): an efficient tool for measuring and tracking viral infection dynamics
Franziska Sick, Andrea Aebischer, Martin Beer, Kerstin Wernike

TL;DR
Researchers created a Schmallenberg virus tagged with a glowing enzyme to track its infection process more efficiently and accurately.
Contribution
A nanoluciferase-tagged SBV was developed for high-throughput and automated viral infection studies.
Findings
The tagged virus replicates as efficiently as the original in cell culture.
The tool enables detailed tracking of viral replication and uptake.
A new serum neutralization assay was developed using the tagged virus.
Abstract
Introduction. Schmallenberg virus (SBV) is an arthropod-borne virus and belongs to the Simbu serogroup within the family Peribunyaviridae, genus Orthobunyavirus. Infection of naïve ruminants at critical stages of gestation can result in severe congenital malformations or abortion. Gap statement. Tools to measure virus infection parameters in cell culture such as replication efficiency, as well as neutralization assays, are mainly available in the form of assays based on the evaluation of cytopathic effects. The methods are labour-intensive and low-throughput, as they require long incubation periods of several days. Tools such as tagged SBV that allow for fast and automated readout are missing. Aim. We aimed to develop a tagged SBV that can be used for assays with fast and automated read-out. Methodology. We report the construction of a recombinant SBV stably expressing the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVector-Borne Animal Diseases · Viral Infections and Vectors · Animal Disease Management and Epidemiology
