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J Virol. 1994 April; 68(4): 2127-2134

trans-dominant interference of type 5 adenovirus E1a mutants in cell transformation.

Q Tang and H S Ginsberg

Department of Microbiology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032.

ABSTRACT

Two type 5 adenovirus (Ad5) early region 1a (E1a) mutants, H5in104 and H5dl105, were impaired in viral replication and cell transformation. In addition, these mutants trans dominantly inhibited the frequency with which H5sub309, a phenotypically wild-type mutant, and H5dl520, a high-frequency transformation mutant, transformed CREF cells. Inhibition of transformation varied in proportion to the input ratio of mutant to coinfecting virus. It was found that H5in104, but not H5dl105, could not complement Ad5 E1b mutants that failed to synthesize 19- or 55-kDa E1b product. H5dl105 yielded 10-fold less virus than the wild-type did in 293 cells, which constitutively express E1a and E1b products; similar low yields were also observed with H5in104 and H5dl105 in another E1a- and E1b-expressing transformed cell line, KB16. Marker rescue and DNA sequence analyses, however, indicated that the phenotypes of H5in104 and H5dl105 were the result of their respective E1a mutations. The data presented are the first to demonstrate that mutants of animal viruses can effect dominant interference with the viral function(s) that produce cell transformation.


J Virol. 1994 April; 68(4): 2127-2134







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