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. 1978 Feb;25(2):471–478. doi: 10.1128/jvi.25.2.471-478.1978

Molecular Mechanisms Involved in the Differential Expression of gag Gene Products by Clonal Isolates of a Primate Sarcoma Virus

Keith C Robbins 1, Hiromi Okabe 2, Steven R Tronick 3, Raymond V Gilden 2, Stuart A Aaronson 3
PMCID: PMC353958  PMID: 203717

Abstract

Clonal isolates of an early passage stock of woolly monkey sarcoma virus (WSV) have been shown to code for different numbers of woolly monkey helper leukemia virus gag gene products. In the present report, the molecular mechanisms responsible for their differential expression of gag gene products have been analyzed. Three WSV RNA genomes were shown to possess sedimentation coefficients consistent with the differences demonstrated in their allotments of helper viral sequences. The WSV variant (WSV clone 9) that expressed no detectable proteins was shown to contain the largest amount of helper viral information. Moreover, there was no additive hybridization of the WLV complementary DNA probe by RNA of this WSV clone and that of a WSV clone coding for several gag gene products. These results suggest that the lack of expression of gag gene products by WSV clone 9 is not due to a major deletion of helper viral gag gene sequences. Similar levels of WLV-specific RNA were demonstrated in cells nonproductively transformed by each WSV clone, arguing that the ability to express gag gene proteins was not related to the magnitude of viral RNA transcription. Taken together, the results are most consistent with a mechanism by which small deletions or point mutations in the genomes of some WSV variants result in premature termination of translation or synthesis of immunologically nonreactive gag gene proteins. The present findings have implications concerning the effects of evolutionary selective pressures on helper viral genetic information in mammalian transforming viruses.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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