Alpharetrovirus
-
Subject Areas on Research
- A model for assembly of type-c oncornaviruses.
- A proposed nomenclature for the virion proteins of oncogenic RNA viruses.
- Association of 3' terminal RNA sequences with avian leukosis viruses causing a high incidence of osteopetrosis.
- Biochemical properties of oncornavirus polypeptides.
- Cross-reactions of virally and chemically induced mouse sarcomas: surface expression of a common viral antigen.
- Effects of adrenal cortical steroids and osmotic blood-brain barrier opening on methotrexate delivery to gliomas in the rodent: the factor of the blood-brain barrier.
- General immunocompetence of rats bearing avian sarcoma virus-induced intracranial tumors.
- Group-specific antigenic determinants of the large envelope glycoprotein of avian oncornaviruses.
- Immunobiology of primary intracranial tumors.
- Improved techniques for staining and enumerating focus formation in viral infectivity assays.
- Isolation of the major viral glycoprotein and a putative precursor from cells transformed by avian sarcoma viruses.
- Minor RNA and other components of host origin intrinsic to avian leukosis virus particles.
- Morphologic observations of brain tumors in PD4 hamsters induced by four strains of avian sarcoma virus.
- Mutants of Fujinami sarcoma virus which are temperature sensitive for cellular transformation and protein kinase activity.
- Polypeptides of avian RNA tumor viruses. IV. Components of the viral envelope.
- Polypeptides of avian RNA tumor viruses. V. Analysis of the virus core.
- Polypeptides of endogenous avian C-type viruses: their detection in the plasma membrane of normal and infected cells.
- Reactivity of avian RNA tumor viruses with lectins.
- Structural components of rna tumor viruses.
- Structure and specific antigens of avian leukosis viruses.
- Studies on the reproductive and cell-converting abilities of avian sarcoma viruses.
- Surface morphology of normal and neoplastic rat cells.
- The role of avian retroviral LTRs in the regulation of gene expression and viral replication.
- Transcriptional activity of avian retroviral long terminal repeats directly correlates with enhancer activity.
- Viral glycoprotein synthesis under conditions of glucosamine block in cells transformed by avian sarcoma viruses.