Artigo Revisado por pares

A block to the intracellular transport and assembly of hepatitis B surface antigen polypeptides in Xenopus oocytes

1988; Elsevier BV; Volume: 166; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/0042-6822(88)90148-1

ISSN

1096-0341

Autores

K Simon, Vishwanath R. Lingappa, Don Ganem,

Tópico(s)

HIV Research and Treatment

Resumo

Hepatitis B surface antigen is the major protein of the virion envelope, and is also independently secreted from infected cells as a subviral particle composed exclusively of HBsAg and host-derived lipid. Similar particles are efficiently assembled and secreted by cultured mammalian cells transfected with the gene for HBsAg. In contrast to such cultured cells, Xenopus oocytes microinjected with HBsAg mRNA secrete less than 5% of newly synthesized HBsAg polypeptides. We have examined the HBsAg biosynthetic intermediates in such oocytes and provide evidence that the impaired secretion of HBsAg is due to a discrete block in the assembly of lipoprotein particles.

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