A highly leukemogenic radiation leukemia virus isolate is a thymotropic, immunosuppressive retrovirus with a unique rna structure

Ya'acob Ben David*, Moshe Kotler, Eitan Yefenof

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Clones of N‐, B‐ and NB‐fibrotropic viruses were isolated from weakly (D‐RadLV) and strongly (A‐RadLV) leukomogenic RadLV preparations. A highly leukemogenic, thymotropic virus (TV) was isolated by ex‐vivo infection of thymocytes with A‐RadLV. This virus could not be isolated from D‐RadLV. Two‐dimensional fingerprint analysis suggested that TV recombines unique RNA sequences with RNA genomic material derived from a B‐tropic endogenous virus. C57BL/6 (B6) mice injected with B‐ or NB‐fibrotropic clones, but not with TV or N‐tropic viral clones, developed reactive T lymphocytes (Tr), capable of differentiating into anti‐tumor cytotoxic cells. The N‐tropic virus isolates were non‐immunogenic in B6 mice whereas the TV isolate induced suppressor T lymphocytes (Ts) that abrogated a potential Tr response. These results suggest that emergence of highly leukemogenic RadLV involves activation of endogenous fibrotropic virus which is immunogenic in its natural host strain (B6). This virus can further recombine with other retroviral genetic sequences, resulting in a suppressogenic and thymotropic, highly leukemogenic virus.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)492-497
Number of pages6
JournalInternational Journal of Cancer
Volume39
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Apr 1987

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