Effect of Vesicular Stomatitis Virus Infection on the Histocompatibility Antigen of L Cells

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RESUMO

When mouse L cells are infected for 22 hr with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), a ribonucleic acid-containing enveloped virus, greater than 70% of the major histocompatibility antigen (H-2), is no longer detectable by the method of inhibition of immune cytolysis. Infected cells prelabeled with 14C-glucosamine also show a correspondingly greater loss of trichloroacetic acid-insoluble radioactivity than uninfected cells. The loss of H-2 antigenic activity is not due to the viral inhibition of host cell protein synthesis since cells cultured for 18 hr in the presence of cycloheximide have the same amount of H-2 activity as untreated controls. Also, cells infected with encephalomyocarditis virus, a picornavirus, show no loss of H-2 activity at a time when host cell protein synthesis is completely inhibited. VSV structural proteins associated in vitro with uninfected L-cell plasma membranes do not render H-2 sites inaccessible to the assay. Although antibodies may not combine with all the H-2 antigenic sites on the plasma membrane, anti-H-2 serum reacted with L cells before infection does not prevent a normal infection with VSV. H-2 activity can be detected in virus samples purified from the medium of infected L cells; this virus purified after being mixed with L-cell homogenates shows greater H-2 activity than virus purified after being mixed with HeLa cell homogenates. However, VSV made in HeLa cells shows no H-2 activity when mixed with L-cell homogenates.

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