Abstract

Recently, we isolated three mutants of MC29 virus which, although able to transform fibroblasts with the same efficiency as wild-type MC29, were 100-fold less efficient at transforming macrophages. In this study we found that MC29-transformed quail producer cell line Q10 was able to generate these partially transformation defective mutants at a high frequency. Using tryptic peptide mapping, we determined that the smaller gag-myc polyproteins encoded by the transformation-defective viruses had lost myc-specific tryptic peptides. This suggested that the mutations which resulted in the transformation-defective viruses being inefficient at transforming macrophages were located in the v-myc sequence and thus directly implicated v-myc and the gag-myc polyprotein in transformation by MC29.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call