Initiation of Mammalian Viral Protein Synthesis |
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Authors: | HANS CAFFIER HESCHEL J. RASKAS J. THOMAS PARSONS MAURICE GREEN |
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Affiliation: | 1.Institute for Molecular Virology,Saint Louis University School of Medicine,Saint Louis |
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Abstract: | CULTURED human cells (KB) infected with human adenovirus type 2 (Ad 2) provide a model system for protein synthesis in mammalian cells. Adenovirus messenger RNA molecules are transcribed from nuclear viral DNA and transported to the cytoplasm for translation1. Late after infection (18 h) 9–10 viral mRNA species with sedimentation values of 7S to 32S are present in polysomes (Parsons, Gardner and Green, in preparation) and specify eight viral structural proteins which account for 80–90% of the polypeptides synthesized in vivo2–4. We now describe an in vitro cell-free system, derived from KB cells infected with Ad 2, which synthesizes 8–9 viral polypeptides and can initiate protein synthesis with a special class of yeast methionyl-tRNA. In vivo and in vitro experiments suggest that methionine is the initiator amino-acid for most, if not all, adenovirus structural proteins. |
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