| Literature DB >> 3783819 |
F V Chisari, P Filippi, A McLachlan, D R Milich, M Riggs, S Lee, R D Palmiter, C A Pinkert, R L Brinster.
Abstract
The outer membrane of the hepatitis B virus consists of host lipid and the hepatitis B virus major (p25, gp28), middle (gp33, gp36), and large (p39, gp42) envelope polypeptides. These polypeptides are encoded by a large open reading frame that contains three in-phase translation start codons and a shared termination signal. The influence of the large envelope polypeptide on the secretion of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) subviral particles in transgenic mice was examined. The major polypeptide is the dominant structural component of the HBsAg particles, which are readily secreted into the blood. A relative increase in production of the large envelope polypeptide compared with that of the major envelope polypeptide led to profound reduction of the HBsAg concentration in serum as a result of accumulation of both envelope polypeptides in a relatively insoluble compartment within the cell. We conclude that inhibition of HBsAg secretion is related to a hitherto unknown property of the pre-S-containing domain of the large envelope polypeptide.Entities:
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Year: 1986 PMID: 3783819 PMCID: PMC253312
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Virol ISSN: 0022-538X Impact factor: 5.103