| Literature DB >> 2993861 |
J H Weis, C S Reiss, R C Mulligan, S J Burakoff, J G Seidman.
Abstract
A recombinant murine retrovirus was constructed which contains, within its genome, a truncated version of the gene encoding the murine H-2Ld major histocompatibility antigen. The H-2Ld gene, which was inserted 3' of the env splice acceptor site in the recombinant retrovirus MSV-neo, lacked the 5' promoter and TATA sequences and the 3' transcription termination and polyadenylate addition sites of the normal H-2Ld gene. Transfection of the MSV-neo/H-2Ld plasmid (pLTV-11) into Y-2 cells resulted in the production of the transmissible recombinant retrovirus LTV-11. Cells infected with LTV-11 virus were resistant to the eucaryotic antibiotic G418 and expressed H-2Ld on the cell surface. These infected cells contained a viral RNA species which possessed both the H-2Ld and the neomycin resistance gene sequences but did not contain significant levels of the smaller H-2Ld-specific mRNA. The H-2Ld antigen expressed on the surface of infected cells functioned as a target for cytolytic T cells specific for the H-2Ld antigen.Entities:
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Year: 1985 PMID: 2993861 PMCID: PMC366867 DOI: 10.1128/mcb.5.6.1379-1384.1985
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Biol ISSN: 0270-7306 Impact factor: 4.272