1 resultado para 124-770C

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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Murine sarcoma viruses constitute a class of replication-defective retroviruses. Cellular transformation may be induced by these viruses in vitro; whereas, fibrosarcomas may result in animals infected with them in vivo (Tooze, 1973; Bishop, 1978). Hybridization studies suggest that murine sarcoma viruses arose by recombination between nondefective murine leukemia virus sequences and certain cellular sequences present in uninfected mouse cells (Hu et al., 1977). A specific gene product, however, has not been implicated in murine sarcoma virus transformation.^ One line of murine sarcoma virus-producing cells, Mo-MuSV-clone 124, (Ball et al., 1973), was studied biochemically because it mainly produces the sarcoma virus as a pseudotype packaged with helper murine leukemia virus proteins. The sarcoma viral RNA was translated in a sophisticated cell-free protein synthesizing system (Murphy and Arlinghaus, 1978). The translation products were analyzed by a number of techniques, including electrophoresis in denaturing gels of SDS polyacrylamide, immunoprecipitation, and peptide mapping. The major products of the total RNA purified from the virus preparation were shown to have molecular weights of about 63,000 (P63('gag)), 42,000 (P42), 40,000 (P40), 38,000 (P38), and 23,000 (P23). The size class of mRNA coding for each of the cell-free products was estimated using a poly(A) selection technique and sucrose gradient fractionation. These analyses were used to localize the coding information related to each of the in vitro synthesized cell-free products within the sarcoma virus genome.^ The major findings of these studies were: (1) the 5' half of the sarcoma viral RNA codes for the 63,000 dalton polypeptide and 42,000 - 38,000 dalton polypeptides derived from the "gag" gene; and (2) the 3' half of the sarcoma viral RNA codes for a 38,000 dalton polypeptide and possibly derived from the cellular acquired sequences. ^