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Interactions of vesicular stomatitis virus with murine cell surface antigens

49

Citations

52

References

1976

Year

Abstract

The process of maturation of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) results in the loss of 70% of the H-2k antigenic activity from L-cell plasma membranes. This phenomenon is also demonstrated during VSV infection of cells of the H-2d haplotype. Using the method of inhibition of immune cytolysis, VSV-infected L5178Y tissue culture cells and VSV-infected METH A fibrosarcoma cells grown in vivo show a loss of H-2d activity of 73 and 76%, respectively. Using monospecific antisera, it is seen that VSV infection results in a significant loss of antigenic activity of the gene products of both the H-2D and H-2K regions in cells of the H-2d and H-2k haplotypes. In hybrid cells expressing H-2k as well as H-2b, VSV infection results in the decrease of both H-2 antigenic activities to the same extent. VSV purified from L cells shows considerable H-2k activity, but the reaction of this virus with anti-H-2k serum does not prevent a normal subsequent infection with this virus. VSV may associate with H-2 antigen in the culture medium, but the results of mixing VSV with uninfected H-2-containing homogenates suggest that this association occurs only when the host cell and the cell homogenate share the same H-2 haplotype. Velocity sedimentation of VSV, which would remove contaminating cellular membrane fragments, does not separate H-2 activity from VSV. H-2 activity is also stably associated with VSV throughout sequential sucrose gradient centrifugation steps. It is possible that H-2 antigen is a structural component of VSV grown in murine cells.

References

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