| Literature DB >> 3016328 |
J Vass-Marengo, A Ratiarson, C Asselin, M Bastin.
Abstract
The oncogenic potential of polyomavirus in newborn rats could not be expressed by a genome encoding only the middle T antigen but required the presence of one of the other two viral early genes, small T or large T. The tumorigenicity defect could also be complemented by other viral or cellular genes that are known to be implicated in immortalization and establishment functions. The simian virus 40(cT)-3 mutant (R. E. Lanford and J. S. Butel, Cell 37:801-813, 1984), which fails to localize to the nucleus, has the capacity to complement polyomavirus middle T in tumorigenesis and to immortalize primary rat embryo fibroblasts when it was cotransfected in the presence of pSV2-neo. Our data suggested that under the conditions of DNA-mediated tumor induction and cotransfection with a dominant selection marker, the cellular alterations achieved by nonnuclear oncogenes such as polyomavirus small T and simian virus 40(cT)-3 were sufficient to complement polyomavirus middle T in transformation and tumorigenesis.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1986 PMID: 3016328 PMCID: PMC253229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Virol ISSN: 0022-538X Impact factor: 5.103