Publication | Open Access
Enucleation and reconstruction of interferon-producing cells.
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Citations
16
References
1977
Year
Viral ReplicationImmunologyCell CultureCellular PhysiologyL CellsInterferon-producing CellsCell InteractionVirus GeneViral GeneticsInterferon FormationCell DivisionNeurovirologyDna ReplicationVirologyInterferon Messenger RnaCell ManipulationCell BiologyDevelopmental BiologyMolecular VirologyVirus-host InteractionMedicineCell Development
Enucleation of L cells leads to loss of the capacity to produce interferon, showing that the cell nucleus is essential for interferon formation. However, when the cells were enucleated while interferon formation. However, when the cells were enucleated while interferon formation was proceeding, the cytoplasts were capable of continuing to synthesize interferon by a process shown to be protein synthesis, showing that the interferon messenger RNA leaves the nucleus after synthesis. Reconstructed cells were obtained by Sendai virus fusion of karyoplasts and cytoplasts. Such reconstructed cells were capable of producing at least as much interferon (43 interferon units/10(4) nucleated cells) as control cells (31 interferon units/10(4) nucleated cells).
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