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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Newly acquired proviruses related to a mink cell focus-inducing murine
leukemia
virus were detected in low copy number in restriction
endonuclease
-digested DNAs from thymic lymphomas of AKR/J mice. These extra proviruses were not present in DNAs of either normal thymus or leukemic brain tissues. Extra tumor-specific DNA fragments generated by restriction endonucleases either were identical in size or fell into similar size classes, suggesting a common site(s) of provirus integration. Characterization of extra EcoRI DNA fragments for mink cell focus-inducing viral sequences revealed that all of them contained large terminal repeat sequences and that a significant number represented proviruses with deletions.
...
PMID:AKR thymic lymphomas involving mink cell focus-inducing murine leukemia viruses have a common region of provirus integration. 630 Apr 21
Among a mixture of amphotropic and ecotropic murine
leukemia
viruses (MuLVs) isolated from paralyzed wild mice, only N-tropic ecotropic MuLV, cloned by cell culture techniques, has been shown to induce paralysis after reinjection into susceptible mice (M. B. Gardner, Curr. Top. Microbiol. Immunol. 79:215-239, 1978). The viral DNA genome of one of these neurotropic MuLVs (Cas-Br-E) has been cloned in Charon 21A at the SalI site. One clone, designated NE-8, was studied in more detail. A restriction
endonuclease
map of this cloned DNA was derived. Cloned viral DNA microinjected into NIH 3T3 cells produced infectious MuLV which was characterized as XC+, ecotropic, and N-tropic. The virus that was recovered after the microinjection of NE-8 DNA was also injected into susceptible SIM.S and NIH Swiss mice and was found to induce lower limb paralysis in these animals. These results make it highly unlikely that other agents (which might have escaped detection and separation from ecotropic MuLV by the techniques previously used) play a role in the etiology of this disease and clearly indicate that the ecotropic MuLV genome harbors sequences responsible for this paralysis. The availability of this clone DNA would now allow us to map these sequences on the genome.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning of infectious viral DNA from ecotropic neurotropic wild mouse retrovirus. 630 Apr 52
Circular duplex reverse transcripts of the genome of a strain of Abelson murine
leukemia
virus that encodes a 160,000-molecular-weight protein were isolated, cleaved with HindIII restriction
endonuclease
, and cloned into the unique HindIII site of lambda phage Charon 21A. Recombinant phage clones, some of which were infectious in transfection assays, were found to contain a 789-base-pair region specific for Abelson murine
leukemia
virus; this region is not found in other strains of this virus. The extra sequence was localized by restriction
endonuclease
and electron microscopic heteroduplex analysis. Sequence analysis showed no homology at the ends of the extra sequence, implying that it was deleted by an event that did not utilize sequence homology. The sequence of this unique region has an open reading frame through its entirety.
...
PMID:Cloning and analysis of reverse transcript P160 genomes of Abelson murine leukemia virus. 630 Apr 57
Recombinant bacteriophage lambda clones from a cat genomic library derived from placental DNA of a specific pathogen-free cat were screened to identify endogenous feline
leukemia
virus (FeLV) sequences. Restriction
endonuclease
mapping of four different clones indicates that there are a number of similarities among them, notably the presence of a 6.0- to 6.4-kilobase pair (kbp) EcoRI hybridizing fragment containing portions of sequences homologous to the gag, pol, env, and long terminal repeat-like elements of the infectious FeLV. The endogenous FeLV sequences isolated are approximately 4 kbp in length and are significantly shorter than the cloned infectious FeLV isolates, which are 8.5 to 8.7 kbp in length. The endogenous elements have 3.3- to 3.6-kbp deletions in the gag-pol region and approximately 0.7- to 1.0-kbp deletions in the env region. These deletions would render them incapable of encoding an infectious virus and may therefore be related to the non-inducibility of FeLV from uninfected cat cells and the subgenomic expression of these endogenous sequences in placental tissue. It appears that there is conservation in the ordering of restriction sites previously reported in the proviruses of the infectious FeLVs in sequences corresponding to the pol and env boundary as well as the region spanning the env gene of the endogenous clones, whereas a greater divergence occurs among restriction sites mapped to the gag and part of the pol regions of the infectious FeLV. Such deleted, FeLV-related subsets of DNA sequences could have originated either by germ-line integration of a complete ecotropic virus followed by deletion, or by integration of a preexisting, defective, deleted variant of the infectious virus.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning and characterization of endogenous feline leukemia virus sequences from a cat genomic library. 630 45
A recombinant DNA clone, named AL10, that contains murine
leukemia
virus (MuLV) related sequences was isolated from BALB/c mouse chromosomal DNA and examined in detail. Restriction
endonuclease
mapping revealed that the 10.5 kbp EcoRI insert consists of a 3.6 kbp left flanking cellular DNA region and a 6.9 kbp MuLV-related region that has a typical proviral LTR-gag-pol-env structure up to the EcoRI site in the env gene region. Comparison of the AL10 map with ecotropic and xenotropic virus isolates revealed many common restriction sites in the LTR and pol gene regions, but much fewer in the leader and gag regions. A stretch of 1,700 nucleotides containing the cellprovirus junctional region was sequenced and revealed transcriptional consensus signals and other structural features characteristic of MuLV LTRs, as well as two distinctive features: (a) a sequence of approximately 170 bp with direct and inverted terminal repeats not seen in infectious MuLV LTRs was identified in the U3 region between the "enhancer" region and the "CAT" box. This novel segment or its homologous sequences appear to be present in most of the endogenous MuLV-related LTRs and in other chromosomal locations of the mouse (b) The tRNA primer binding site is not complementary to proline tRNA, the primer for all known MuLVs, but is a 17/18 match with rat glutamine tRNA. The integration site of AL10 provirus was in a unique DNA region but contained an "Alu"-like short interdispersed repeat in the 5' adjacent cellular region. The AL10 proviral integration found in BALB/c was also apparent in RFM, AKR and SENCAR mouse cells but not in cells of NFS/N, C3H, HRS/J, SC-1, and a California Lake Casitas wild mouse.
...
PMID:A novel sequence segment and other nucleotide structural features in the long terminal repeat of a BALB/c mouse genomic leukemia virus-related DNA clone. 631 May 6
A lymphocytic leukemia induced by the oncogenic DNA simian virus 40 (SV40) in an inbred LSH/SsLak Syrian golden hamster was evoked to produce infectious SV40 by fusion of the
leukemia
cells with grivet monkey kidney (GMK) cells and by exposure of the
leukemia
cells to the chemical inducers mitomycin C and cycloheximide. Plaque-purified viable substrains of the rescued SV40 when studied by restriction
endonuclease
digestion of viral DNA were found to contain small deletions within the Hind III restriction fragment C. These deletions lay near the viral origin of DNA replication. Ten plaque-purified substrains of the rescued virus identified by immunofluorescence as being SV40 were found, when compared to the wild-type SV40, to replicate slowly and to form small plaques. Although these substrains transformed NIH/3T3 cells as efficiently as the wild-type SV40 in tissue culture, they were generally less oncogenic in vivo--7 of the 10 failed to induce tumors. The 3 oncogenic SV40-rescued substrains were not found to exhibit "lymphocytotropism," i.e., the capacity to infect and neoplastically transform preferentially hamster lymphocytes. Thus the hamster lymphocytic leukemia originally induced by the wild-type SV40 was most likely a chance-stochastic event rather than the result of tropism-determinism mediated by the virus, as is usually the case with leukemogenic RNA viruses.
...
PMID:Biologic properties of viable deletion mutants of simian virus 40 (SV40) rescued from the cells of an SV40-induced hamster lymphocytic leukemia. 631 36
Analyses of Hirt extracts from endogeneous murine
leukemia
virus (MuLV)-infected cells revealed the presence of 9-kbp linear DNA and two superhelical forms with one or two tandem copies of the long terminal repeat (LTR). In contrast, cells that were infected with AKR MCF247 MuLV yielded two major linear forms of 9.0 and 8.4 kbp and one discrete superhelical DNA. In addition, there was a heterogeneous population of superhelical DNAs that were larger and smaller than the major superhelical DNA species. Restriction
endonuclease
treatment of purified linear and superhelical DNAs have revealed that MCF247 MuLV unintegrated viral DNA is very heterogeneous. Evidence is presented that there are at least two linear DNAs; one is 9-kbp full-length linear DNA, whereas the other major form contains a 0.6 to 0.7-kbp deletion in the envelope gene adjacent to the right LTR. In addition, there are two size classes of the LTR in at least the full-length linear DNA. The major superhelical DNA species is a 8.4-kbp form which contains one copy of the LTR. Other heterogeneous superhelical DNAs appear to contain env-gene deletions or partially deleted copies of a tandem LTR region.
...
PMID:Unusual properties of AKR MCF-247 murine leukemia virus unintegrated proviral DNA. 631 96
We isolated and characterized two spontaneous, weakly leukemogenic mutants of Rauscher spleen focus-forming virus (R-SFFV) that contain mutations in nonoverlapping regions of the membrane envelope (env) glycoprotein gene. As reported previously (M. Ruta and D. Kabat, J. Virol. 35:844-853, 1980), the replication-defective R-SFFV encodes a membrane glycoprotein with an apparent Mr of 54,000 (gp54) which is structurally and immunologically related to the membrane envelope glycoproteins of dual-tropic murine
leukemia
viruses. Mutant R-SFFV clones 3-25 and 4-3 encode abnormally sized gp54-related glycoproteins with apparent Mrs of 52,000 (gp52) and 45,000 (gp45), respectively. Northern and Southern blot analyses of the mutant R-SFFV nucleic acids indicated that an insertion has occurred in the 3-25 env gene and that a deletion has occurred in the 4-3 env gene. Furthermore, restriction
endonuclease
analyses and comparisons of the fragmentation patterns of the wild-type and mutant glycoproteins generated by partial proteolysis with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease indicated that the mutations affect nonoverlapping domains of the envelope glycoprotein (amino-terminal fragment affected in 3-25 glycoprotein and carboxyl-terminal fragment affected in 4-3 glycoprotein). Glycosylation inhibition studies indicated that the reduced size of gp52 is caused at least partly by loss of an asparagine-linked oligosaccharide. In addition, these mutant viruses have dramatically reduced leukemogenicities compared with wild-type R-SFFV. We conclude that the gp54 structural gene is required for initiation or amplification of the splenic erythroblast hyperplasia which characterizes the preleukemic phase of Rauscher disease.
...
PMID:Reduced leukemogenicity caused by mutations in the membrane glycoprotein gene of Rauscher spleen focus-forming virus. 631 40
By the use of recombinant DNA technology and microinjection in cultured cells, the molecular genetic elements involved in the evolution of a retrovirus with the multipotential to infect, transform and replicate in host cell, have been critically examined in this investigation. Recently we have identified and purified the integrated and proviral DNA sequences specific for two rat endogenous helper
leukemia
viruses, WR- RaLV , originated from a chemically induced wild rat fibrosarcoma, and RHHV , isolated from a chemically induced rat hepatoma, HTC-H1 (1). By using a multidisciplinary approach combining restriction
endonuclease
analysis, reverse phase V-column chromatography, agarose gel electrophoresis, Southern blot transfer and filter nucleic acid hybridization, we were able to demonstrate that the rat helper
leukemia
viral DNA sequence was approximately 8.4-8.8 kb. The 8.8 kb RHHV DNA was molecularly cloned via the EK-1 certified vector pBR 322 plasmid into E. coli RRI cells. A successful recombinant clone, 8/32, that carried one entire RHHV 8.8 kb DNA sequence was mapped by restriction
endonuclease
analyses. Restricted DNA fragments of various sizes throughout the complete RHHV genome were isolated and purified for intranuclear microinjection into normal rat kidney cells. Release of type C infectious helper virus in these microinjected cells was investigated by superinfection on K-NRK, Kirsten sarcoma transformed non-producer cells. Recombination of the helper viral DNA sequence, en toto or of subgenomic sizes, carried in microinjected cells, with the sarcomagenic DNA sequence, carried in K-NRK cells, was also studied by genome-rescue and cell-transformation experiments. Our observations led to the conclusion that all critical genetic elements including the 5' LTR helper DNA sequence, gag, pol, and env genes, encoded for the biological activity of the type C helper virus resided within the 6.0 kb proximal to the 5' terminus of the endogenous rat type C helper virus DNA. They proved vitally essential for the recombination with the Src sequence during the evolution of an infectious, transforming and replication-competent retrovirus.
...
PMID:Cloning of the rat endogenous helper leukemia virus DNA sequence and expression of the helper activity encoded by the cloned DNA sequence in normal rat kidney cells by microinjection. 632 7
To identify specific cellular factors which could be required during the synthesis of retroviral DNA, we have studied the replication of murine
leukemia
virus in mouse cells temperature sensitive for cell DNA synthesis (M. L. Slater and H. L. Ozer, Cell 7:289-295, 1976) and in several of their revertants. This mutation has previously been mapped on the X chromosome. We found that a short incubation of mutant cells at a nonpermissive temperature (39 degrees C) during the early part of the virus cycle (between 0- to 20-h postinfection) greatly inhibited virus production. This effect was not observed in revertant or wild-type cells. Molecular studies by the Southern transfer procedure of the unintegrated viral DNA synthesized in these cells at a permissive (33 degrees C) or nonpermissive temperature revealed that the levels of linear double-stranded viral DNA (8.8 kilobase pairs) were nearly identical in mutant or revertant cells incubated at 33 or 39 degrees C. However, the levels of two species of supercoiled viral DNA (with one or two long terminal repeats) were significantly lower in mutant cells incubated at 39 degrees C than in mutant cells incubated at 33 degrees C or in revertant cells incubated at 39 degrees C. Pulse-chase experiments showed that linear viral DNA made at 39 degrees C could not be converted into supercoiled viral DNA in mutant cells after a shift down to 33 degrees C. In contrast, such conversion was observed in revertant cells. Restriction
endonuclease
analysis did not detect differences in the structure of linear viral DNA made at 39 degrees C in mutant cells as compared to linear viral DNA isolated from the same cells at 33 degrees C. However, linear viral DNA made at 39 degrees C in mutant cells was poorly infectious in transfection assays. Taken together, these results strongly suggest that this X-linked gene, affecting mouse cell DNA synthesis, is operating in the early phase of murine
leukemia
virus replication. It seems to affect the level of production of unintegrated linear viral DNA only slightly while greatly reducing the infectivity of these molecules. In contrast, the accumulation of supercoiled viral DNA and subsequent progeny virus production are greatly reduced. Our pulse-chase experiments suggest that the apparent, but not yet identified, defect in linear viral DNA molecules might be responsible for their subsequent impaired circularization.
...
PMID:An X-linked gene affecting mouse cell DNA synthesis also affects production of unintegrated linear and supercoiled DNA of murine leukemia virus. 653 58
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