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Functional Analysis

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Complementation describes the ability of gene products from two different mutant viruses to interact functionally in the same cell, permitting viral reproduction. It can be distinguished from recombination or reassortment by examining the progeny produced by coinfected cells. True complementation yields only the two parental mutants, while wild-type genomes result from recombination or reassortment. If the mutations being tested are in separate genes, each virus is able to supply a functional gene product, allowing both viruses to be reproduced. If the two viruses carry mutations in the same gene, no reproduction will occur. In this way, the members of collections of mutants obtained by chemical mutagenesis were initially organized into complementation groups defining separate viral functions. In principle, there can be as many complementation groups as genes.

Principles of Virology

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