Abstract

T antigen in extracts of cells infected with tsA mutants is 2 to 6 times more labile at 32°C or 41°C than the antigen in extracts of cells infected with wild-type SV40, as assayed by complement fixation. The stabilities of wild-type and mutant antigens are not altered by mixing the extracts, and thus the stability is an intrinsic property of each antigen and is not determined by another component of the extract. This observation indicates that T antigen is probably the virus-coded product of the A gene. In cells infected at the permissive temperature of 32°C with a high multiplicity of either wild-type or tsA mutant virus, the amounts of T antigen are approximately equivalent and increase logarithmically during the entire period of infection, up to 96 hr. Cells infected at 32°C for 96 hr with mixtures of wild-type and tsA virus produce T antigen with the stability of wild-type, even when the infection is carried out with up to a 5 fold excess of the mutant. The more stable wild-type antigen may repress, directly or indirectly, the synthesis of the more labile mutant antigen.

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