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Query: UMLS:C1261473 (
sarcoma
)
25,952
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Radioimmunological techniques were applied to the quantitation of the translational products of the gag, pol, and
env
genes of mammalian type C viruses. Analysis of the viral proteins associated with simian
sarcoma
-associated virus (SSA V) and SSA V-infected cells revealed in each that the level of reverse transcriptase was less than 1% of that of the major viral structural protein, p30. The rate of intracellular degradation of reverse transcriptase in SSA V-infected cells was found to be no greater than that of several viral structural proteins, indicating that the lower levels of viral enzyme resulted from its decreased synthesis. By screening individual cells infected at limiting SSA V dilution, it was possible to isolate a clone (clone 16), which demonstrated levels of viral p12, p30, and gp70 similar to those found in wild-type SSA V-infected cells, and which released noninfectious virions in large quantity. The noninfectious virions and clone 16 cells were shown to lack immunologically or enzymologically detectable reverse transcriptase. With serial passage of clone 16 cells, reverse transcriptase activity became spontaneously detectable in tissue culture fluids, concomitant with the appearance of infectious virus. The reverse transcriptase associated with this virus was indistinguishable from SSA V polymerase, indicating that the genetic alteration restricting SSA V pol gene expression in clone 16 cells was reversible. These results further demonstrate the strict requirement of reverse transcriptase for establishment of type C virus infection. Possible mechanisms to account for the patterns of type C viral gene expression detected in SSA V-infected cells are discussed.
...
PMID:Differential synthesis of mammalian type C viral gene products in infected cells. 7 58
A focus-forming virus previously isolated from a BALB/c mouse hemangiosarcoma has been shown to be replication defective. Analysis of individual BALB/c mouse
sarcoma
virus (BALB-MSV) nonproducer transformants for expression of helper virus-coded proteins revealed genetically stable variants that expressed two, three, or all four gag gene products in the absence of detectable helper viral
env
gene expression. The type-specific antigenic determinants of helper viral proteins encoded by the BALB-MSV genome and by the B-tropic virus isolated from the BALB-MSV stock were demonstrated to be indistinguishable from those of BALB:virus-1, a known endogenous virus of BALB/c cells. These findings imply that a BALB/c endogenous virus was involved in the generation of BALB-MSV. By the same immunological approach, the presence of at least a portion of the Moloney-MuLV gag gene has been identified in two other transforming viruses--Moloney-MSV and Abelson lymphosarcoma virus--previously isolated from the BALB/c strain. The tissue culture properties of cells transformed by these defective viruses were also shown to be distinguishable. These findings indicate that transforming virus isolates of the same inbred strain differ in their transforming activities as well as in the helper viral sequences stably associated with their genomes.
...
PMID:Origin and biological properties of a new BALB/c mouse sarcoma virus. 8 Apr 61
Moloney lymphomas and Moloney sarcomas share strong tumor antigens. In this report we analyze the cell-surface antigens on a Balb/c Moloney lymphoma, LSTRA, using hyperimmune
sarcoma
regressor sera (alphaMo) as a primary reagent. We also use heterologous anti-viral p30 and gp70 sera for a direct analysis of virion protein antigens on the LSTRA surface. Using radiolabeled alphaMo-binding assays, we demonstrate that LSTRA tumor antigens detected by these sera are all Moloney viral antigens; approximately 1/3 of these antigenic determinants are expressed on the intact virus, and the other determinants are revealed by detergent lysis of the virus. The major viral antigens expressed on the LSTRA cell surface are viral
env
gene products, whereas gag gene products are only sparsely represented. We conclude that alphaMo sera detect almost exclusively viral antigens on LSTRA cells, and these antigens are almost exclusively virion
env
gene products.
...
PMID:A serologic comparison of Moloney lymphoma cell surface and Moloney oncornavirus antigens. 8 79
Three factor crosses were performed between Rouse
sarcoma
virus mutants with temperature-sensitive markers in the pol and src genes and host range markers in the
env
gene. A number of recombinant viruses appeared to segregate from virus particles which were heterozygous for all three genes under study. The frequency of various recombinant genotypes in the progeny was consistent with there being no greater linkage between the neighbouring gene pairs of pol and
env
and
env
and src than between the more distant pol and src. The significance of these results to proposed mechanisms of avian retrovirus recombination is discussed.
...
PMID:Genetic recombination in Rous sarcoma virus: the genesis of recombinants and lack of evidence for linkage between pol, env and src genes in three factor crosses. 9 Jan 14
We have investigated the use of oligodeoxycytidylic acid [oligo(dC)] as a primer for the initiation of DNA synthesis by the avian retrovirus reverse transcriptase in vitro, employing the viral RNA genome as template. The addition of oligo(dC)(12-18) to viral 35S RNA results in a stimulation of DNA synthesis by the viral RNA-directed DNA polymerase comparable to that observed when oligo(dT) is employed as a primer. Under similar conditions neither oligo(dA)(12-18) nor oligo(dG)(12-18) was active as primer for transcription of the avian retrovirus genome. Several different approaches have been employed to localize the oligo(dC)(12-18) binding site on the viral genome, including isolation of poly(A)-containing fragments, competition hybridization, and RNase H hydrolysis. These analyses indicate that oligo(dC)(12-18) binds to a site approximately 2,000 to 3,000 nucleotides from the 3' terminus of the genome of transforming strains of avian sarcoma viruses and approximately 700 to 1,000 nucleotides from the 3' terminus of nontransforming avian retroviruses. Therefore, the major site of initiation of DNA synthesis by oligo(dC)(12-18) appears to be in the vicinity of the 3' end of the
env
gene and the 5' end of the src gene, although the presence of minor initiation sites located elsewhere on the viral genome cannot be excluded by these data. Characterization of oligonucleotides after pancreatic RNase hydrolysis and poly(C)-Sepharose chromatography of viral RNA directly demonstrates the presence of oligoguanylic acid residues in the avian sarcoma virus genome. DNA sequences transcribed from the oligo(dC) primer appear to be conserved in all of the avian leukosis-
sarcoma
viruses tested. The use of oligo(dC) as a tool for the production of specific complementary DNA probes is discussed.
...
PMID:Initiation of DNA synthesis by the avian retrovirus reverse transcriptase in vitro: nature and location of the oligodeoxycytidylic acid primer binding site. 9 Jan 58
The RNase-T1-resistant oligonucleotides of two Prague Rous sarcoma viruses with temperature-sensitive (ts) DNA polymerases (DNA nucleotidyltransferases), termed ts LA 337 and 335 of one leukosis virus, RAV-6, and 20 of their recombinant progeny have been mapped relative to the 3' poly (A) terminus of the viral RNA. The resulting oligonucleotide maps have been ocrrelated with markers of the four known viral genetic elements encoded in the RNA of 10,000 nucleotides. In accord with previous results recombinant RNAs contained (i) oligonucleotides characteristic of the src gene, coding for
sarcoma
formation, between the poly(A) end and 2000 nucleotides and (ii) olignucleotides characteristic of the
env
gene, coding for the envelope glycoprotein, between 2500 and 5000 nucleo tides from the poly(A) end. (iii) A cluster of four oligonucleotides that mapped between 6000 and 8000 nucleotides from the 3' poly(A) end of each RNA was shared by both parental viruses and all recombinants. Since all other map segments of our recombinants failed to segregate with the ts- or wild-type markers of the parental DNA polymerase gene (pol), it was concluded that the ts pol lesion maps in this RNA segment. (iv) The 5' segment of each recombinant RNA contained a cluster of four to five oligonucleotides whose parental origin correlated with an electrophoretic marker of one of the parental virion proteins, p27, a major product of the viral gag gene. The gene order 5'-gag-pol-env-src-poly(A) is consistent with our data.
...
PMID:Mapping oligonucleotides of Rous sarcoma virus RNA that segregate with polymerase and group-specific antigen markers in recombinants. 18 81
The
env
gene of avian leukosis-
sarcoma
viruses encodes a glycoprotein that determines the host range and surface antigenicitiy of virions. We have purified radioactive DNA (cDNAgp) complementary to at least a portion of the
env
gene for viral subgroups A and C; complementary DNA was synthesized with purified virions of wild-type avian sarcoma virus, and RNA from a mutant with a deletion in
env
was used to select DNA specific to
env
by molecular hybridization. The genetic complexity of cDNAgp for subgroup A (ca. 2,000 nucleotides) was sufficient to represent the entire deletion and most or all of the
env
cistron. The deletions in
env
in two independently isolated strains of virus (Bryan and rdNY8SR) overlap, and cDNAgp represents nucleotide sequences common to both deletions. By contrast, we could detect no overlap between deletions in
env
and deletions in the adjacent viral gene src. Laboratory stocks of viral subgroups A, B, C, D and E do not contain detectable amounts of
env
deletions when tested by molecular hybridization; hence, segregation of deletions in
env
is a less frequent event that the segregation of deletions in the viral transforming gene src (Vogt, 1971). We found extensive homology among the nucleotide sequences encoding the
env
genes of virus strains indigenous to chickens (subgroups A, B, C, D, and E) although subgorups B, D and E appear to differ slightly from subgroups A and C at the
env
locus. By contrast, viruses obtained from pheasant cells (subgroups F and G) have
env
genes with little or no relationship to
env
genes of chikcen viruses. According to available data, viruses of subgroup F arose by recombination between an avarian
sarcoma
virus and viral genes in the genome of ring-necked pheasants, whereas subgroup G viruses may be entirely endogenous to golden pheasants.
...
PMID:Purification of DNA complementary to the env gene of avian sarcoma virus and analysis of relationships among the env genes of avian leukosis-sarcoma viruses. 18 84
The spleen focus-forming virus (SFFV), a replication-defective murine leukemia virus that causes the rapid transformation of certain hematopoietic target cells, has acquired specific xenotropic viral genetic information not contained in Friend helper virus. In the current studies, it is shown that a cDNA that represents a xenotropic virus portion of SFFV detects genetic sequences derived from the
env
gene region of murine xenotropic virus. The significance of the acquisition of these xenotropic viral sequences by SFFV is discussed with regard to their possible role in the rapid leukemogenicity of SFFV, and an analogy is drawn between the formation of SFFV and the formation of the Kirsten and Harvey
sarcoma
viruses.
...
PMID:Friend strain of spleen focus-forming virus is a recombinant between ecotropic murine type C virus and the env gene region of xenotropic type C virus. 20 Sep 27
We have used mapping of large T1 oligonucleotides to examine the genome of Rous-associated virus-O (RAV-O), an endogenous virus of chickens, and to compare it with that of Prague strain Rous sarcoma virus, subgroup B, (Pr-RSV-B), an exogenous
sarcoma
virus. To extend the sensitivity of such comparisons, we have developed a system of nucleic acid hybridization and hybridization-competition combined with fingerprinting. This method allows us to estimate the relative degree of relatedness of various portions of the viral genomes. From the results of this study, we have concluded that the genomes of Pr-RSV-B and RAV-O are related in the following way. The 5'-terminal half of the genomes (corresponding to the gag and pol regions) is virtually identical, with only scattered single nucleotide differences. This region is followed by a region comprising 25 to 30% of the genome (the
env
region) which contains substantial nucleotide sequence differences, most or all of which are due to single base changes. The
env
-coding region can be further subdivided into three regions: a more variable region probably containing sequences coding for subgroup specificity, flanked by relatively common sequences on each side. To the 3' side of the
env
region, the RAV-O genome contains a very short sequence not found in Pr-RSV-B, whereas the Pr-RSV-B genome contains a much longer unrelated sequence. The central portion of this sequence comprises the src gene as defined by transformation-defective mutants. Particularly striking is the absence, in the RAV-O genome, of any nucleotide sequence related to the "c region" found very near the 3' end of all exogenous tumor viruses. Both the Pr-RSV-B and RAV-O genomes contain the identical terminally redundant sequence of 21 nucleotides near each end of the genome.
...
PMID:Nucleotide sequence relationships between the genomes of an endogenous and an exogenous avian tumor virus. 21 88
We have developed a system to induce oncornavirus-specific secondary cytotoxic response in vitro. When Moloney strain of murine
sarcoma
virus-immune spleen cells were cultivated with purified infectious Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) or with supernates of tissue culture cells containing infectious virus, a virus-specific secondary cytotoxic response directed against type-specific determinant(s) of M-MuLV was generated in vitro, as determined by a 4-h 51Cr-release assay. The effector cells were susceptible to the treatment with anti-Thyl.2 plus complement, but were unrelated to natural killer cells (NK), because they could not lyse some target cells specific for M-MuLV in both the induction phase and the interaction between effector cells and target cells. Furthermore, a product of the
env
gene of M-MuLV, perhaps gp70, appeared to be responsible for this response, because viruses with recombinations in the
env
gene between ecotropic M-MuLV and a xenotropic virus failed to induce a response. When infectious M-MuLV was exposed to UV-light at different doses, the ability of UV-treated M-MuLV to induce a secondary cytotoxic response decreased in parallel with infectivity, indicating that infectivity was necessary for the induction of this response.
...
PMID:In vitro induction of T-lymphocyte-mediated cytotoxicity by infectious murine type C oncornaviruses. 22 87
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