Molecular diversity among five different endogenous primate retroviruses.

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RESUMO

Genetically transmitted retroviruses of Old and New World monkeys include type C viruses isolated from baboons (M7), macaque (MAC-1), and owl monkeys (OMC-1) and type D viruses from langurs (PO-1-Lu) and squirrel monkeys (SMRV, M534). Each of these isolates is unrelated to the others by nucleic acid hybridization criteria and contains a unique array of virion-associated proteins which can be resolved by agarose gel filtration and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under denaturing conditions. The major structural protein of each virus has a distinct primary structure, as determined by two-dimensional tryptic peptide analysis, and is antigenically different from the others. The major virion phosphoproteins of endogenous primate type C viruses (pp15) are also different from those of type D viruses (pp13-pp14). Immunological and structural analyses show that the endogenous langur virus and the horizontally transmitted Mason-Pfizer virus of rhesus monkeys are closely related to one another, consistent with the sequence homology detected in their RNA genomes. Although certain radioimmunoassays detect interspecies antigenic determinants common to either the p30 or gp70 proteins of some of these viruses, no one assay has yet been designed which can detect all groups of endogenous primate retroviridae. The data lead to the conclusion that primates contain a minimum of three different sets of genetically transmitted type C and type D retroviral genes.

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