6 research outputs found

    Characterization of fastidious adenovirus types 40 and 41 by DNA restriction enzyme analysis and by neutralizing monoclonal antibodies.

    Get PDF
    The DNA of 48 strains of adenovirus type 40 (Ad40) and of 128 strains of adenovirus type 41 (Ad41), isolated between 1971 and 1986 from various countries, was characterized by restriction enzyme analysis using nine and ten restriction endonucleases respectively. Five new DNA variants of Ad40 and 18 new DNA variants of Ad41 were detected. Most of the restriction sites which differed among the various DNA variants appeared to be distributed at random over the entire length of the viral genomes of the two serotypes. The number of restriction sites by which two DNA variants differed from each other was used as a measure of their relatedness. Several clusters of closely related DNA variants were observed for each of the two serotypes. The 35 DNA variants of Ad40 and Ad41 were used to test monoclonal antibody preparations for their range of reactivity in a neutralization assay. One monoclonal antibody (5-8), raised against Ad40 strain Dugan, showed type-specific neutralization of all 11 Ad40 DNA variants tested. Six monoclonal antibodies, raised against Ad41 strain Tak, neutralized different proportions of the variants of Ad41. Two of these preparations (1-21 and 3-19) neutralized all 24 Ad41 DNA variants, while a third (1-23) reacted with only 12 Ad41 variants. Three other monoclonal antibody preparations (3-10, 3-18, 7-14) reacted specifically with only 6 of these 12 variants. The patterns of reactivity with the monoclonal antibody preparations correlated with the presence or absence of a HindIII restriction site at 56 map units and of an EcoRI restriction site at 52 map units on the Ad41 DNA. This region of the adenovirus DNA codes for the hexon protein, which is known to contain the type-specific neutralizing antigenic determinants

    Overlapping sense and antisense transcription units in Trypanosoma brucei

    No full text
    Procyclins are the major surface glycoproteins of insect-form Trypanosoma brucei. The procyclin expression sites are polycistronic and are transcribed by an alpha-amanitin-resistant polymerase, probably RNA polymerase I (Pol I). The expression sites are flanked by transcription units that are sensitive to alpha-amanitin, which is a hallmark of Pol II-driven transcription. We have analysed a region of 9.5 kb connecting the EP/PAG2 expression site with the downstream transcription unit. The procyclin expression site is longer than was previously realized and contains an additional gene, procyclin-associated gene 4 (PAG4), and a region of unknown function, the T region, that gives rise to trans-spliced, polyadenylated RNAs containing small open reading frames (ORFs). Two new genes, GU1 and GU2, were identified in the downstream transcription unit on the opposite strand. Unexpectedly, the 3' untranslated region of GU2 and the complementary T transcripts overlap by several hundred base pairs. Replacement of GU2 by a unique tag confirmed that sense and antisense transcription occurred from a single chromosomal locus. Overlapping transcription is stage specific and may extend > or = 10 kb in insect-form trypanosomes. The nucleotide composition of the T. brucei genome is such that antisense ORFs occur frequently. If stable mRNAs can be derived from both strands, the coding potential of the genome may be substantially larger than has previously been suspected.Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tFLWINinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
    corecore