Abstract

The newly constructed adenovirus type 5 mutant in1 carries a single AT base pair insertion immediately after nucleotide position 1715 in the E1B gene sequence which destroys the proximal AUG normally present in E1B messages and prevents production of intact E1B 19-kDa protein in infected cells. We have used in1, variants of in1 containing mutant alleles of viral genes known to enhance transformation frequency, and adenovirus type 5 mutant dl337 (S. Pilder, J. Logan, and T. Shenk, J. Virol. 52:664-671, 1984), in which the sequence between nucleotides 1770 and 1916 within the 19-kDa reading frame is deleted, to test the generally accepted hypothesis that this E1B protein is essential for the transformation of rodent cells and maintenance of the transformed phenotype. We find that these mutants transform rat embryo cells, rat kidney and mouse kidney primary cells, and cells of the 3Y1 rat line with decreased frequencies only when virus is added to these various cells at high input multiplicities of infection. In contrast, when lower doses of virus are used, the mutants transform with wild-type frequencies. Cells infected with higher doses of mutant virus show increased levels of DNA degradation and cell killing compared with those of cells infected with the same levels of wild-type virus, and these effects most likely contribute to the decreased transformation frequencies observed. On the basis of these results and the results of phenotypic analyses of numerous transformants, we propose that the E1B 19-kDa protein is not required for induction and/or maintenance of transformed-cell characteristics in rodent cells infected with adenovirus type 5.

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