| Literature DB >> 18769545 |
Beihua Dong1, Robert H Silverman, Eugene S Kandel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Murine Leukemia Virus (MLV) is a rodent gammaretrovirus that serves as the backbone for common gene delivery tools designed for experimental and therapeutic applications. Recently, an infectious gammaretrovirus designated XMRV has been identified in prostate cancer patients. The similarity between the MLV and XMRV genomes suggests a possibility that the two viruses may interact when present in the same cell. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18769545 PMCID: PMC2519784 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0003144
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1XMRV facilitates the transfer of MLV-based LNCE to naïve cells.
A. The scheme of the experimental approach. DU145LNCE and DU145XMRV were generated by infecting DU145 cells with LNCE and XMRV respectively. The supernatant from DU145XMRV or fresh DU145 cells was applied onto DU145LNCE cultures. The treated cells were cultivated for additional week, and the presence of infection LNCE particles in the supernatant was tested by applying the latter to naïve DU145 cells (designated DU145XL or DU145CL respectively). The cells were selected in the presence of G418. No DU145CL cells survived the selection. B. Structure of LNCE[6]. LTR-MLV long terminal repeat; psi-MLV packaging signal; neo-neomycin resistance gene; CMV–cytomegalovirus promoter/enhancer region; GFP–the gene for enhanced green fluorescent protein. Positions of hybridization probes (thick lines) and PCR products (dotted lines) are shown below and above the diagram respectively. The predicted sizes of the PCR fragments and the distance between the two KpnI sites are indicated. C. Amplification of LNCE LTR from DU145XL cells. The expected product was obtained from the DNA of the pooled G418-resistant cells (lane 1) and several individually expanded clones (lanes 2–4), but not the original DU145 (lane 5). D. Amplification of an internal LNCE provirus fragment from DU145XL cells. The product was obtained from the DNA of DU145XL (lane 1), but not the naïve DU145 (lane 2). E. Detection of transmission of LNCE in the presence of XMRV by Southern blotting. Hybridization with the probe derived from the GFP fragment was performed on KpnI-digested DNA from DU145 (lane 1), DU145XMRV (lane 2), DU145LNCE (lane 3) and DU145XL (lane 4).
Figure 2Determination of the titer of infectious LNCE in the presence of XMRV.
The supernatant from DU145LNCE cells exposed to the medium from either DU145 (control medium) or DU145XMRV cells was applied in various dilutions to subconfluent cultures of naïve DU145 cells grown in 6-well plates. The treated cells were selected for G418 resistance and the surviving colonies were visualized by methylene blue staining. Neo-transducing particles were readily detectable in the supernatant of XMRV-exposed cells at 1,000-fold (panel A) and 10,000-fold (panel B), but not 100,000-fold (panel C) dilutions. The supernatant from DU145LNCE exposed to control medium was not toxic by itself (panel E), but it failed to transduce the resistance marker even when used without dilution (panel D).