Publication | Open Access
A small nuclear ribonucleoprotein is required for splicing of adenoviral early RNA sequences.
245
Citations
35
References
1981
Year
Small Nuclear RibonucleoproteinViral ReplicationGeneticsRna SplicingImmunologyMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsVirus StructureSplicing VariantViral Rna SpeciesVirus GeneViral GeneticsRna ProcessingAdenovirus Type 2Rna BiologyDna ReplicationVirologyRna TransportGene ExpressionProductive InfectionMolecular VirologyNatural SciencesMedicine
The size and structure of viral RNA species synthesized in nuclei isolated during the early phase of productive infection by adenovirus type 2 have been examined by electrophoresis in denaturing polyacrylamide cells and the nuclease S1 assay. The major products of transcription in vitro of early regions 1 and 2 in the adenoviral genome are processed RNA molecules that appear to be correctly spliced in isolated nuclei. Splicing of adenoviral RNA molecules is inhibited when nuclei are preincubated with antibodies from systemic lupus erythematosus patients that immunoprecipitate small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles. The specificity of these antibodies suggests that ribonucleoprotein particles containing U1 RNA are required for splicing of the adenoviral RNA sequences we have examined.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1