Abstract

In vitro translation of Rous sarcoma virus virion RNA resulted in the synthesis of a protein kinase which, when immunoprecipitated with antitumor serum, phosphorylated the immunoglobulin heavy chain. Even though in vitro translation of virion RNA resulted in the synthesis of a number of polypeptides which were recognized by antitumor serum, control experiments demonstrated that an immunoprecipitable protein kinase activity was found only when an immunoprecipitable p60src, the polypeptide product of the src gene, was synthesized. A protein kinase with similar properties was therefore intimately associated with p60src which was synthesized in vitro in the reticulocyte lysate, just as it is with p60src which is obtained from transformed chick and mammalian cells. It is therefore highly unlikely that this association is artifactual. ts NY68 is a mutant of Rous sarcoma virus which is able to transform cells at 36 but not at 41 degrees C. In vitro translation of ts NY68 virion RNA at 30 degrees C resulted in efficient synthesis of immunoprecipitable p60src, but very inefficient synthesis of an immunoprecipitable protein kinase. The p60src obtained by in vitro translation of wild-type virion RNA was more than 20-fold more active as a protein kinase than was that obtained from ts NY68 RNA. The correlation in the case of ts NY68 of a deficiency in protein kinase activity with an inability to transform cells at high temperature suggests that the protein kinase activity associated with p60src is indeed critical to cellular transformation.

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