Relationships among the polypeptides of Newcastle disease virus.
AUTOR(ES)
Hightower, L E
RESUMO
We have studied the relationships among the polypeptides of Newcastle disease virus by using both kinetic and tryptic peptide analyses. The results of our tryptic peptide analyses suggest that there are at least six unique viral polypeptides--L, HN, FO(F), NP, M, and a 47,000-dalton polypeptide. The small virion glycopolypeptide F is related to FO, a glycopolypeptide found only in infected cells. In addition, several smaller polypeptides, including a 53,000-dalton polypeptide found both in purified virions and in infected cells, are related to the nucleocaspid protein. Kinetic analysis of each viral polypeptide reveals that all of the major viral polypeptides, with the possible exception of L, are stable after an amino acid chase. A precursor-product relationship between FO and F was not demonstrable by pulse-chase experiments. Also, almost the same relative amount of F, the putative product, was present in infected cultures after either 5 or 30 min of radioisotopic labeling. These results suggest that FO is processed rapidly.
ACESSO AO ARTIGO
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=355769Documentos Relacionados
- Noncytopathic mutants of Newcastle disease virus.
- Relationships Among Virus Spread, Cytopathogenicity, and Virulence as Revealed by the Noncytopathic Mutants of Newcastle Disease Virus
- Transcriptional map for Newcastle disease virus.
- NEWCASTLE DISEASE VIRUS. AN EVOLVING PATHOGEN
- Biological consequences of neuraminidase deficiency in Newcastle disease virus.