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Science 4 November 1966:
Vol. 154. no. 3749, pp. 671 - 673
DOI: 10.1126/science.154.3749.671

Articles

Replication of Adenovirus Type 7 in Monkey Cells: A New Determinant and Its Transfer to Adenovirus Type 2

Janet S. Butel 1, Fred Rapp 1, Joseph L. Melnick 1, and Ben A. Rubin 1

1 Department of Virology and Epidemiology, Baylor University College of Medicine, Houston, Texas; Wyeth Laboratories, Radnor, Pennsylvania

A strain of human adenovirus type 7, adapted to replication in green-monkey kidney cells, requires the interaction of two particles to initiate plaque formation in the simian cells. One particle is a true adenovirion. The second, apparently defective, consists of a genome carrying amonkey-adapting component in an adenovirus capsid; this genome does not express known SV40 determinants. The addition of human adenovirus type 7 that is not adapted enhances the titer and changesconditions for plaque formation by the adapted virus to a one-particle requirement. Addition of nonadapted human adenovirus type 2 as helper virus results in the transfer of the monkey-adaptingcomponent from adenovirus type 7 to adenovirus type 2. The population containing the adenovirus 2 transcapsidant then has the ability to replicate in simian cells.





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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)