Abstract

Experiments were performed to characterize the viral related RNA species which appear in extracts of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV)-infected tissue and, in particular, the low molecular weight (ca. 350,000 daltons) component, LMC. It was determined that LMC is probably not a component of the virus rod but is a fragment of unincapsidated TMV RNA. Synthesis of LMC in diseased tissue is not inhibited by the presence of actinomycin D. Because LMC would not reconstitute into a rod with TMV protein, it was considered not to contain a detectable amount of the 5′ terminus of TMV RNA. Polyadenylic acid sequences could not be detected by three analytical methods in any RNA component. In addition to LMC, which is homogeneous in size, TMV RNA fragments polydisperse in size are also present in leaf tissue extracts. In contrast, RNA complementary to TMV RNA was present in extracts only as a component of the double-stranded TMV replicative form and was not found free in the infected cell. Neither fragments of replicative form nor single-stranded TMV complementary RNA could be detected. In addition, the only RNA fraction of uniform size found to contain both an RNA species and its complement was the TMV replicative form.

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