Publication | Open Access
Nearest-neighbor interactions of the major RNA tumor virus glycoprotein on murine cell surfaces.
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Citations
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References
1978
Year
Murine Leukemia VirusViral ReplicationGlycobiologyImmunologyMolecular BiologyViral Structural ProteinImmunotherapyVirus StructureTumor BiologyViral GeneticsMurine Cell SurfacesMajor Envelope GlycoproteinVirologyCell BiologyNearest-neighbor InteractionsMolecular VirologyMedicineViral OncologyFormaldehyde-fixed Staphylococcus Aureus
Formaldehyde-fixed Staphylococcus aureus and monospecific antiserum to gp70, the major envelope glycoprotein of murine leukemia virus, were used to immunoadsorb gp70 from Nonidet P40 extracts prepared from surface-radioiodinated murine cells. The labeled gp70 molecules in these cells were linked to a protein of approximately 15,000 daltons via native disulfide bonding. Prior treatment of cells with the reversible, bifunctional, crosslinking reagent dimethyl-3,3'-dithiobispropionimidate, followed by immunoadsorption and two-dimensional diagonal electrophoresis, revealed apparent homodimers and homotrimers of the 85,000-dalton complex. Identical treatment of purified type C RNA tumor virus from murine cells also revealed homodimeric and homotrimeric species, demonstrating similar self-associating tendencies of this glycoprotein in both intact virus and the plasma membrane of nonproducing murine cells. One cross-linked product consistently detected on the surfaces of murine cells was not present after crosslinking of a representative strain of murine leukemia virus.
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