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J Virol. 1982 November; 44(2): 437-443

Evidence that infectious pancreatic necrosis virus has a genome-linked protein.

R H Persson and R D Macdonald

ABSTRACT

The double-stranded RNA segments of infectious pancreatic necrosis virus were extracted from virions by a method which avoids proteinase. In contrast to proteinase-treated RNA, such segments (i) exhibited a lower electrophoretic mobility in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels and agarose gels, (ii) had a slightly lower buoyant density, and (iii) demonstrated a marked tendency toward aggregation as observed by electron microscopy. A small amount of protein tightly bound to the RNA could account for the above properties, and a 110,000-dalton protein was liberated from purified virion RNA by sequential digestion with RNase III and RNase A. The amount of radioactivity associated with RNA from virions labeled in vivo with [35S]methionine suggested that an average of 1.4 molecules was bound per RNA segment. Interactions between RNA segments seen in electron micrographs appeared to occur only among the ends of the segments, suggesting these were the exclusive sites of protein attachment.


J Virol. 1982 November; 44(2): 437-443







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