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1.
The influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) glycoprotein synthesized from cloned DNA in a simian virus 40 vector is expressed on the surface of infected primate cells. Previously, it has been demonstrated that mutant HAs lacking the hydrophobic carboxy terminus fail to anchor on the cell surface and therefore are secreted extracellularly. During analysis of additional HA deletion mutants derived from an HA-simian virus 40 recombinant, we found a mutant with an altered hydrophobic carboxy terminus that exhibited another phenotype. This deletion mutant, dl-12, produced HA that was neither secreted nor expressed on the infected cell surface. The mutant HA was similar to the wild-type HA in apparent molecular weight and extent of glycosylation as assayed by endoglycosidase H sensitivity. The mutant HA localized near the perinuclear region of infected cells as indicated by an indirect immunofluorescence assay. Sequence analysis showed that a 5-base-pair deletion had occurred before the region encoding the hydrophobic carboxy terminus. Nevertheless, the physicochemical properties of the wild-type HA carboxy terminus were maintained in that the truncated HA carboxy terminus consisted of predominantly hydrophobic amino acids followed by several charged amino acids residues. This similarity in the carboxy terminus between the wild-type and mutant HAs may be responsible for the functional similarities observed. In spite of these similarities, the mutant HA failed to mature at the surface. These results suggest that the maturation of the mutant HA is blocked during a late stage in the transit to the cell surface.  相似文献   

2.
The impending influenza virus pandemic requires global vaccination to prevent large-scale mortality and morbidity, but traditional influenza virus vaccine production is too slow for rapid responses. We have developed bacterial systems for expression and purification of properly folded functional hemagglutinin as a rapid response to emerging pandemic strains. A recombinant H5N1 (A/Vietnam/1203/2004) hemagglutinin globular domain (HA1) was produced in Escherichia coli under controlled redox refolding conditions. Importantly, the properly folded HA1(1-320), i.e., HA1 lacking amino acids 321 to 330, contained ≥75% functional oligomers without addition of foreign oligomerization sequence. Site-directed mutagenesis mapped the oligomerization signal to the HA1 N-terminal Ile-Cys-Ile residues at positions 3 to 5. The purified HA1 oligomers (but not monomers) bound fetuin and agglutinated red blood cells. Upon immunization of rabbits, the oligomeric HA1(1-320) elicited potent neutralizing antibodies against homologous and heterologous H5N1 viruses more rapidly than HA1(28-320) containing only monomers. Ferrets vaccinated with oligomeric HA1 (but not monomeric HA1 with the N terminus deleted) at 15 and 3 μg/dose were fully protected from lethality and weight loss after challenge with homologous H5N1 (A/Vietnam/1203/2004, clade 1) virus, as well as heterologous clade 2.2 H5N1 (A/WooperSwan/Mongolia/244/2005) virus. Protection was associated with a significant reduction in viral loads in the nasal washes of homologous and heterologous virus challenged ferrets. This is the first study that describes the presence of an N-terminal oligomerization sequence in the globular domain of influenza virus hemagglutinin. Our findings suggest that functional oligomeric rHA1-based vaccines can be produced efficiently in bacterial systems and can be easily upscaled in response to a pandemic influenza virus threat.  相似文献   

3.
The cytoplasmic tail of the murine leukemia virus (MuLV) envelope (Env) protein is known to play an important role in regulating viral fusion activity. Upon removal of the C-terminal 16 amino acids, designated as the R peptide, the fusion activity of the Env protein is activated. To extend our understanding of the inhibitory effect of the R peptide and investigate the specificity of inhibition, we constructed chimeric influenza virus-MuLV hemagglutinin (HA) genes. The influenza virus HA protein is the best-studied membrane fusion model, and we investigated the fusion activities of the chimeric HA proteins. We compared constructs in which the coding sequence for the cytoplasmic tail of the influenza virus HA protein was replaced by that of the wild-type or mutant MuLV Env protein or in which the cytoplasmic tail sequence of the MuLV Env protein was added to the HA cytoplasmic domain. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and Western blot analysis showed that all chimeric HA proteins were effectively expressed on the cell surface and cleaved by trypsin. In BHK21 cells, the wild-type HA protein had a significant ability after trypsin cleavage to induce syncytium formation at pH 5.1; however, neither the chimeric HA protein with the full-length cytoplasmic tail of MuLV Env nor the full-length HA protein followed by the R peptide showed any syncytium formation. When the R peptide was truncated or mutated, the fusion activity was partially recovered in the chimeric HA proteins. A low-pH conformational-change assay showed that similar conformational changes occurred for the wild-type and chimeric HA proteins. All chimeric HA proteins were capable of promoting hemifusion and small fusion pore formation, as shown by a dye redistribution assay. These results indicate that the R peptide of the MuLV Env protein has a sequence-dependent inhibitory effect on influenza virus HA protein-induced membrane fusion and that the inhibitory effect occurs at a late stage in fusion pore enlargement.  相似文献   

4.
The nucleotide sequence of the Sendai virus (SV) HN (hemagglutinin-neuraminidase) gene was determined. The deduced primary structure of the protein showed only one hydrophobic domain likely to represent the transmembrane region, but at its N terminus. Since the SV F protein is anchored in the membrane at its C terminus, the two SV glycoproteins are thus membrane-anchored in opposite orientations, similar to the two influenza virus (FLU) glycoproteins. Amino acid sequence comparisons of the SV HN and the FLU HA and NA proteins revealed homologies between 100 amino acids of the hemagglutinin region of the FLU HA protein and the C terminus of the SV HN, and between 200 amino acids of the neuraminidase region of the FLU NA and the central region of SV HN. Alignment of the neuraminidase, hemagglutinin, and fusion regions shared by these glycoproteins suggest the structure of a possible ancestral gene.  相似文献   

5.
During membrane fusion, the influenza A virus hemagglutinin (HA) adopts an extended helical structure that contains the viral transmembrane and fusion peptide domains at the same end of the molecule. The peptide segments that link the end of this rod-like structure to the membrane-associating domains are approximately 10 amino acids in each case, and their structure at the pH of fusion is currently unknown. Here, we examine mutant HAs and influenza viruses containing such HAs to determine whether these peptide linkers are subject to specific length requirements for the proper folding of native HA and for membrane fusion function. Using pairwise deletions and insertions, we show that the region flanking the fusion peptide appears to be important for the folding of the native HA structure but that mutant proteins with small insertions can be expressed on the cell surface and are functional for membrane fusion. HA mutants with deletions of up to 10 residues and insertions of as many as 12 amino acids were generated for the peptide linker to the viral transmembrane domain, and all folded properly and were expressed on the cell surface. For these mutants, it was possible to designate length restrictions for efficient membrane fusion, as functional activity was observed only for mutants containing linkers with insertions or deletions of eight residues or less. The linker peptide mutants are discussed with respect to requirements for the folding of native HAs and length restrictions for membrane fusion activity.  相似文献   

6.
A segment from the pre-s region of the woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) was inserted into an open reading frame vector allowing for the expression in Escherichia coli of viral determinants as part of a fusion protein. The bacterially synthesized fusion molecule contained eight amino acids from beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) at the N terminus, followed by 89 pre-s-encoded amino acids and 219 amino acids of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) at the C terminus (beta-gal:pre-s:CAT). This tribrid protein was used to generate antiserum which had a significant titer to the viral portion of the fusion polypeptide. Anti-beta-gal:pre-s:CAT was used in Western blot analysis to identify viral proteins containing pre-s-encoded determinants. Antiserum to the tribrid molecule recognized four WHV polypeptides with molecular masses of 33, 36, 45, and 47 kilodaltons, each of which was also recognized by a monoclonal antibody to WHV surface antigen. Using the same anti-tribrid serum, we also identified analogous polypeptides from ground squirrel hepatitis virus. The antiserum was also used to immunoprecipitate virus particles containing endogenous DNA polymerase activity, indicating that pre-s determinants are found on the surface of mature virions. Based on previous computer studies and the location of pre-s-encoded molecules on the surface of virus particles, a role in hepadnavirus host cell entry is suggested for these polypeptides.  相似文献   

7.
Previous nucleotide sequence analysis of RNA segment 7 of influenza B virus indicated that, in addition to the reading frame encoding the 248 amino acid M1 protein, there is a second overlapping reading frame (BM2ORF) of 585 nucleotides that has the coding capacity for 195 amino acids. To search for a polypeptide product derived from BM2ORF, a genetically engineered beta-galactosidase-BM2ORF fusion protein was expressed in Escherichia coli and a polyclonal rabbit antiserum was raised to the purified fusion protein. This antiserum was used to identify a polypeptide, designated BM2 protein (Mr approximately equal to 12,000), that is synthesized in influenza B virus-infected cells. To understand the mechanism by which the BM2 protein is generated from influenza B virus RNA segment 7, a mutational analysis of the cloned DNA was performed and the altered DNAs were expressed in eukaryotic cells. The expression patterns of the M1 and BM2 proteins from the altered DNAs indicate that the BM2 protein initiation codon overlaps with the termination codon of the M1 protein in an overlapping translational stop-start pentanucleotide, TAATG, and that the expression of the BM2 protein requires 5'-adjacent termination of M1 synthesis. Our data suggest that a termination-reinitiation scheme is used in translation of a bicistronic mRNA derived from influenza B virus RNA segment 7, and this strategy has some analogy to prokaryotic coupled stop-start translation of tandem cistrons.  相似文献   

8.
We have expressed two variants of chicken striated muscle alpha-tropomyosin in Escherichia coli: fusion tropomyosin containing 80 amino acids of a non-structural influenza virus protein (NS1) on the amino terminus and a non-fusion tropomyosin which is a variant because the amino-terminal methionine is not acetylated (unacetylated tropomyosin). From our analysis of purified proteins in vitro we suggest that the amino-terminal region, which is highly conserved in muscle tropomyosins, is crucial for all aspects of tropomyosin function. Both forms are altered in tropomyosin activity: neither shows head-to-tail polymerization, with or without troponin. Unacetylated tropomyosin binds weakly to actin, but in the presence of troponin it binds well and can regulate the actomyosin ATPase. Fusion tropomyosin binds well to actin, but binding of troponin is calcium-sensitive and it does not confer effective calcium sensitivity on the actomyosin ATPase. Our results indicate that the local charge at the amino terminus is critical for actin binding but that normal head-to-tail association is not required. The properties of fusion tropomyosin-troponin interaction are indicative of impaired troponin T binding to tropomyosin and provide evidence for its binding to the amino terminus of tropomyosin.  相似文献   

9.
Vaccinia virus (VV) is a potent immunogen, but the nature of VV proteins involved in the activation of the immune response of the host is not yet known. By screening a lambda gt11 expression library of rabbitpox virus DNA with serum from humans vaccinated against smallpox or with serum from VV-immunized animals, we identified several VV genes that encode highly antigenic viral proteins with molecular masses of 62, 39, 32, 25, 21, and 14 kDa. It was found that VV proteins of 62, 39, 25, and 21 kDa are part of the virus core, while proteins of 32 and 14 kDa are part of the virus envelope. All of these proteins were synthesized at late times postinfection. Proteins of 62 and 25 kDa were produced by cleavage of larger precursors of 95 kDa (p4a) and 28 kDa, respectively. The 21-kDa protein was the result of a cleavage of p4a, presumably at amino acid Gly-697. DNA sequence analysis, in comparison with the known nucleotide sequence of VV, provided identification of the corresponding open reading frames. Expression of the viral genes in Escherichia coli was used to monitor which of the viral antigens elicit immunodominant responses and the location of antigenic domains. Three viral antigens of 62, 39, and 32 kDa exhibited immunodominant characteristics. The most antigenic sites of 62 and 39 kDa were identified at the N terminus (amino acids 132 to 295) and C terminus (last 103 amino acids), respectively. Immunization of mice with the 62-, 39-, or 14-kDa antigenic proteins conferred different degrees of protection from VV challenge. Proteins of 32 and 14 kDa induced cellular proliferative responses in VV-infected mice. Our findings demonstrate the nature of VV proteins involved in the activation of host immune responses after vaccination, provide identification of the viral gene locus, and define structural and immunological properties of these antigenic VV proteins.  相似文献   

10.
通过对虎源流感病毒A/ Tiger/ Harbin/01/ 2003 (H5N1)的HA 基因进行克隆与序列测定,证明该基因全长为1 731 bp,读码框由1 707个碱基组成,编码568 个氨基酸。对HA 基因的进化分析表明,该基因与H5 亚型流感病毒的HA 基因同源性最高,其HA 裂解位点由6 个碱性氨基酸插入序列(RRRKKR)组成,符合高致病性禽流感病毒的分子特征。将HA 基因克隆入杆状病毒转座载体质粒pFastBacⅠ,构建重组质粒pFastBac-HA;再将该重组质粒转化DH10 Bac 感受态细菌,在体内进行重组,并经三重抗性与蓝白斑筛选,得到杆状病毒重组质粒Bacmid-HA;将Bacmid-HA 转染sf9 细胞,获得重组杆状病毒。经Western-blotting 检测,HA 蛋白在重组杆状病毒中获得表达。用感染重组病毒的sf9 细胞免疫小鼠,2 次免疫后2 周可诱导小鼠产生1∶ 8 ~1∶ 16 的血凝抑制抗体,表明虎源流感病毒的HA 基因在重组杆状病毒系统中得到了正确表达。  相似文献   

11.
The NS1 protein of influenza A virus has been shown to enter and accumulate in the nuclei of virus-infected cells independently of any other influenza viral protein. Therefore, the NS1 protein contains within its polypeptide sequence the information that codes for its nuclear localization. To define the nuclear signal of the NS1 protein, a series of recombinant simian virus 40 vectors that express deletion mutants or fusion proteins was constructed. Analysis of the proteins expressed resulted in identification of two regions of the NS1 protein which affect its cellular location. Nuclear localization signal 1 (NLS1) contains the stretch of basic amino acids Asp-Arg-Leu-Arg-Arg (codons 34 to 38). This sequence is conserved in all NS1 proteins of influenza A viruses, as well as in that of influenza B viruses. NLS2 is defined within the region between amino acids 203 and 237. This domain is present in the NS1 proteins of most influenza A virus strains. NLS1 and NLS2 contain basic amino acids and are similar to previously defined nuclear signal sequences of other proteins.  相似文献   

12.
A R Davis  A L Hiti  D P Nayak 《Gene》1980,10(3):205-218
A synthetic dodecadeoxynucleotide primer has been used to prepare a double-stranded DNA form of the hemagglutinin (HA) gene of a human influenza virus (WSN strain, HON1). This DNA has been inserted in plasmid pBR322 and cloned in bacterial cells. The insert contains nearly the complete hemagglutinin gene. A restriction map of this insert has been determined and structurally important areas of the HA gene have been sequenced. Amino acid sequences of several regions of the HA protein were deduced from the DNA sequences and compared to the known amino acid sequences of other influenza A viruses. WSN HA shows extensive homology to all influenza A viruses in a few regions, namely the first 17 amino acids of the N-terminus of HA1 (N-terminal polypeptide of HA) and the first 24 amino acids of the N-terminus of HA2 (C-terminal polypeptide of HA). The sequence diverges extensively from other influenza A viruses in most other areas. The sequence of WSN virus HA is similar to that of other HON1 viruses with the exception of the C-terminus of the HA1 peptide. The change in this area may contribute to some of the unique properties of WSN virus among the HON1 viruses. In addition, WSN HA contains a 17-amino-acid precursor before the N-terminus of HA1 and a single amino acid, arginine, connecting HA1 and HA2.  相似文献   

13.
The integrase (IN) protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) catalyzes site-specific cleavage of 2 bases from the viral long terminal repeat (LTR) sequence yet it binds DNA with little DNA sequence specificity. We have previously demonstrated that the C-terminal half of IN (amino acids 154-288) possesses a DNA binding domain. In order to further characterize this region, a series of clones expressing truncated forms of IN as N-terminal fusion proteins in E.coli were constructed and analyzed by Southwestern blotting. Proteins containing amino acids 1-263, 1-248 and 170-288 retained the ability to bind DNA, whereas a protein containing amino acids 1-180 showed no detectable DNA binding. This defines a DNA binding domain contained within amino acids 180-248. This region contains an arrangement of 9 lysine and arginine residues each separated by 2-4 amino acids (KxxxKxxxKxxxxRxxxRxxRxxxxKxxxKxxxK), spanning amino acids 211-244, which is conserved in all HIV-1 isolates. A clone expressing full-length IN with a C-terminal fusion of 16 amino acids was able to bind DNA comparably to a cloned protein with a free C-terminus, and an IN-specific monoclonal antibody which recognizes an epitope contained within amino acids 264-279 was unable to block DNA binding, supporting the evidence that a region necessary for binding lies upstream of amino acid 264.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The protein encoded by varicella-zoster virus open reading frame 63 and carboxy-terminal deletions of the same were expressed either as fusion proteins at the carboxy terminus of the maltose-binding protein in Escherichia coli or independently in transfected mammalian cells. The truncations contained amino acids 1 to 142 (63 delta N) or 1 to 210 (63 delta K) of the complete 278-amino-acid primary sequence. Recombinant casein kinase II phosphorylated the 63F and 63 delta KF fusion proteins in vitro but did not phosphorylate the 63 delta NF fusion protein, implying that phosphorylation occurred between amino acids 142 and 210. Immunoprecipitation of 35S- or 32P-labelled extracts of cells transfected with plasmids expressing 63, 63 delta N, or 63 delta K also indicated that in situ phosphorylation most likely occurred between amino acids 142 and 210. These combined results suggest that casein kinase II plays a significant role in the phosphorylation of the varicella-zoster virus 63 protein. Indirect immunofluorescence of transfected cells indicated nuclear localization of the 63 protein and cytoplasmic localization of 63 delta K and 63 delta N, implying a requirement for sequences between amino acids 210 and 278 for efficient nuclear localization.  相似文献   

16.
Wang F  Yang W  Fang F  Chang H  Yu P  Chen Z 《DNA and cell biology》2008,27(7):377-385
Hemagglutinin (HA) is the main surface glycoprotein of influenza B virus. The B/Ibaraki/2/85 virus HA gene is 1758 bp in length, including signal peptide sequence, HA1 sequence, and HA2 sequence. We previously proved that B/Ibaraki/2/85 HA DNA induced immune response and provided effective protection in mice against challenge with homologous virus. In this study, a series of recombinant plasmids encoding truncated HA gene were constructed by PCR. BALB/c mice were immunized with the plasmids and challenged with a lethal dose of homologous virus. The essential sequence of HA DNA against influenza virus was explored by evaluation of survival rate, lung virus titer, bodyweight change, and serum anti-HA antibody titer of mice. The result showed that serial deletion did not deprive HA DNA of its protective ability until 885 nucleotides (295 amino acids) at 3'-terminal or 9 nucleotides of the signal peptide sequence at 5'-terminal were deleted. When the signal peptide sequence was kept intact and the 5'-terminal deletion started at the beginning of the HA1 sequence, deletion of 51 nucleotides (17 amino acids) made HA DNA lose its protective ability. This suggests that the sequence nt94-876 of B/Ibaraki/2/85 virus HA DNA played an important role in protection against infection.  相似文献   

17.
The ability of mutant or chimeric A/Japan hemagglutinins (HAs) to compete for space in the envelope of A/WSN influenza viruses was investigated with monkey kidney fibroblasts that were infected with recombinant simian virus 40 vectors expressing the Japan proteins and superinfected with A/WSN influenza virus. Wild-type Japan HA assembled into virions as well as WSN HA did. Japan HA lacking its cytoplasmic sequences, HAtail-, was incorporated into influenza virions at half the efficiency of wild-type Japan HA. Chimeric HAs containing the 11 cytoplasmic amino acids of the herpes simplex virus type 1gC glycoprotein or the 29 cytoplasmic amino acids of the vesicular stomatitis virus G protein were incorporated into virions at less than 1% the efficiency of HAtail-. Thus, the cytoplasmic domain of HA was not required for the selection process; however, foreign cytoplasmic sequences, even short ones, were excluded. A chimeric HA having the gC transmembrane domain and the HA cytoplasmic domain (HgCH) was incorporated at 4% the efficiency of HAtail-. When expressed from simian virus 40 recombinants in this system, vesicular stomatitis virus G protein with or without (Gtail-) its cytoplasmic domain was essentially excluded from influenza virions. Taken together, these data indicate that the HA transmembrane domain is required for incorporation of HA into influenza virions. The slightly more efficient incorporation of HgCH than G or Gtail- could indicate that the region important for assembling HA into virions extends into part of the cytoplasmic domain.  相似文献   

18.
Recombinant bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) nonstructural protein 5B (NS5B) produced in insect cells has been shown to possess an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) activity. Our initial attempt to produce the full-length BVDV NS5B with a C-terminal hexahistidine tag in Escherichia coli failed due to the expression of insoluble products. Prompted by a recent report that removal of the C-terminal hydrophobic domain significantly improved the solubility of hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS5B, we constructed a similar deletion of 24 amino acids at the C terminus of BVDV NS5B. The resulting fusion protein, NS5BDeltaCT24-His, was purified to homogeneity and demonstrated to direct RNA replication via both primer-dependent (elongative) and primer-independent (de novo) mechanisms. Furthermore, BVDV RdRp was found to utilize a circular single-stranded DNA as a template for RNA synthesis, suggesting that synthesis does not require ends in the template. In addition to the previously described polymerase motifs A, B, C, and D, alignments with other flavivirus sequences revealed two additional motifs, one N-terminal to motif A and one C-terminal to motif D. Extensive alanine substitutions showed that while most mutations had similar effects on both elongative and de novo RNA syntheses, some had selective effects. Finally, deletions of up to 90 amino acids from the N terminus did not significantly affect RdRp activities, whereas deletions of more than 24 amino acids at the C terminus resulted in either insoluble products or soluble proteins (DeltaCT179 and DeltaCT218) that lacked RdRp activities.  相似文献   

19.

Background

The major role of the neuraminidase (NA) protein of influenza A virus is related to its sialidase activity, which disrupts the interaction between the envelope hemagglutin (HA) protein and the sialic acid receptors expressed at the surface of infected cells. This enzymatic activity is known to promote the release and spread of progeny viral particles following their production by infected cells, but a potential role of NA in earlier steps of the viral life cycle has never been clearly demonstrated. In this study we have examined the impact of NA expression on influenza HA-mediated viral membrane fusion and virion infectivity.

Methodology/Principal Findings

The role of NA in the early stages of influenza virus replication was examined using a cell-cell fusion assay that mimics HA-mediated membrane fusion, and a virion infectivity assay using HIV-based pseudoparticles expressing influenza HA and/or NA proteins. In the cell-cell fusion assay, which bypasses the endocytocytosis step that is characteristic of influenza virus entry, we found that in proper HA maturation conditions, NA clearly enhanced fusion in a dose-dependent manner. Similarly, expression of NA at the surface of pseudoparticles significantly enhanced virion infectivity. Further experiments using exogeneous soluble NA revealed that the most likely mechanism for enhancement of fusion and infectivity by NA was related to desialylation of virion-expressed HA.

Conclusion/Significance

The NA protein of influenza A virus is not only required for virion release and spread but also plays a critical role in virion infectivity and HA-mediated membrane fusion.  相似文献   

20.
A library of rabbit poxvirus DNA fragments contained in the expression cloning vector lambda gt11 was screened with monoclonal antibodies that react specifically against a 14-kilodalton envelope protein of vaccinia virus and rabbit poxvirus. The 14-kilodalton protein appears to play an important role in virus penetration at the level of cell fusion; it also elicits neutralizing antibodies, and it forms covalently linked trimers on the surface of virions and in infected cells (Rodriguez et al., J. Virol. 56:482-488, 1985; Rodriguez et al., J. Virol. 61:395-404, 1987). Two recombinant bacteriophages expressing beta-galactosidase fusion proteins were isolated. Restriction enzyme analysis and hybridization studies mapped the 14-kilodalton encoding sequences in the middle of vaccinia virus HindIII A DNA fragment. Nucleotide sequence analysis revealed an open reading frame (ATG) preceded by a characteristic TAA sequence of late genes. The sequence spans 330 nucleotides and codes for a protein with a molecular weight of 12,500 and an isoelectric point of 6.3. There are two small hydrophobic regions, one at the C terminus (11 amino acids) and the other at the N terminus (5 amino acids). The protein contains two cysteines for oligomer formation and one glycosylation site. Inspection of the deduced amino acid sequence of the 14-kilodalton protein revealed consensus sites with the hemagglutinin precursor of influenza A virus and with adenylate kinase and cytochrome c of various species.  相似文献   

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