Correlation Between the Antiviral Effect of Interferon Treatment and the Inhibition of In Vitro mRNA Translation in Noninfected L cells

Author:

Falcoff E.12,Falcoff R.12,Lebleu B.12,Revel M.12

Affiliation:

1. Institut du Radium, Paris, France

2. Department of Biochemistry, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel

Abstract

When noninfected L-cell suspension cultures are treated with interferon (specific activities superior to 10 6 reference units per mg of protein), the cell-free cytoplasmic extracts obtained are inactive for the translation of exogenous natural mRNAs. The dose-response curve shows that comparable amounts of interferon are required to produce a 50% reduction of Mengo virus multiplication in vivo and Mengo RNA translation in vitro. With higher doses of interferon, Mengo RNA translation is completely abolished, while poly U translation and endogenous protein synthesis are only slightly affected. The inactivation of Mengo RNA translation is reversible; after removal of interferon, normal translation activity is regained together with the ability to support Mengo virus multiplication. Fractionation of the cell-free extracts shows that the effect is localized in the fraction which can be washed off the ribosomes by high salt. These results establish that interferon induces a block in genetic translation in noninfected L cells.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

Reference29 articles.

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4. In vitro translation of cardio virus ribonucleic acid by mammalian cell-free extracts;Eggen K. L.;J. Virol.,1972

5. Synthesis of interferon in human Iymphocytes stimulated in vitro by antilymphocytic serum;Falcoff E.;Eur. J. Clin. Biol. Res.,1972

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