Abstract
Inoculation of the leafhopper cell line AC-20 with wound tumor virus resulted in a productive noncytopathic infection with no detectable alteration of cellular protein synthesis. Virus-specific polypeptide synthesis, detectable by 8 h postinoculation, increased in a linear fashion, reaching a peak (approximately 10 to 15% of total protein synthesis) by 48 h postinoculation. The rate of viral protein synthesis continued at this level for several days but declined, relative to cellular protein synthesis, as infected cells were passaged. By passage 10, the synthesis of viral polypeptides was reduced to a level approximately 5% of that observed at 48 h postinoculation. Viral protein synthesis was not stimulated by superinfection. Viral antigens and infectious virus persisted in the majority (greater than 90%) of cells in an infected culture even after more than 100 passages. The synthesis of wound tumor virus polypeptides in infected insect vector cells appears to be regulated in a coordinated and selective manner.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
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