Immortalization of rat embryo fibroblasts by an adenovirus 2 mutant expressing a single functional E1a protein.

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RESUMO

Expression of the adenovirus E1a and E1b genes is required for transformation of nonpermissive rodent cells. Differential splicing of the E1a precursor RNA molecules results in the production of two early mRNAs, 13S and 12S, which encode a 289-amino-acid-residue (289R) and 243R protein, respectively. Previously we constructed a mutant virus, dl231, which can only produce normal 289R protein from the E1a gene. In this report we demonstrate that dl231 induced focal transformation of primary rat embryo fibroblasts at 20% of the level of wild-type virus. dl231 transformants were immortalized and produced normal levels of E1a 13S and E1b mRNAs but only minute levels of defective E1a 12S mRNA. These transformants only minimally expressed the transformation phenotype and were similar to untransformed cells. Unlike wild-type transformants, they had a more fibroblastic morphology, were contact inhibited, grew to only low saturation density, and were limited in their ability to grow in an anchorage-independent manner in soft agar. We conclude that the 289R E1a protein can mediate immortalization of primary cells and that the 243R E1a protein is required to elicit the full transformation phenotype.

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