Abstract
The pattern of viral gene expression in cells infected with HIV-1 is orchestrated by several regulatory proteins. One such viral gene product is Rev (regulator of expression of virus), a 13 kDa basic protein that plays a crucial role in determining whether full-length transcripts coding for the major structural proteins of HIV-1 are exported intact from the nucleus into the cytoplasm, so that active proliferation of the virus can ensue. Purified Rov has been shown to polymerize in vitro into long filamentous polymers. Based on this and other observations, it has been hypothesized that Rev functions rather like the nucleocapsid protein of a filamentous RNA virus, and that coating of the transcripts in question by Rev is the mechanism whereby they are protected from splicing. To explore this hypothesis further, we have studied the structure of these Rev polymers in greater detail.
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More From: Proceedings, annual meeting, Electron Microscopy Society of America
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