Abstrakt: |
The tRNAs that are bound to the genomic RNAs of several murine, feline, and primate retroviruses have been identified. Transfer RNAs were divided into those loosely bound and those tightly bound by stepwise thermal dissociation of the 70 S RNA. They were then identified and semiquantitated by aminoacylation. Proline tRNA is the most tenaciously bound tRNA in several strains of murine leukemia virus, two strains of feline leukemia virus, and the primate viruses simian sarcoma, baboon endogenous, and gibbon ape lymphoma. In the feline xenotropic virus, RD-114, tRNAGly is enriched in the most tightly bound fraction. In Mason-Pfizer monkey virus, as in the murine mammary tumor virus, tRNALys is the tRNA most tenaciously bound to its genomic RNA. Besides the most tightly associated tRNA, one or more different tRNAs are found in relatively large amounts in association with the 70 S RNA. (For convenience, we refer to the largest RNA ccomplex (50-70 S) isolated from any of the retroviruses studies as '70 S' RNA.) These tRNAs can be distinguished from the most tightly bound tRNA by the fact that they can be dissociated at lower temperatures. However, they occur in the same relative abundance as the tightly bound tRNA. |