1994
Stimulation of Heterologous Protein Degradation by the Vpu Protein of HIV-1 Requires the Transmembrane and Cytoplasmic Domains of CD4
Buonocore L, Turi T, Crise B, Rose J. Stimulation of Heterologous Protein Degradation by the Vpu Protein of HIV-1 Requires the Transmembrane and Cytoplasmic Domains of CD4. Virology 1994, 204: 482-486. PMID: 8091684, DOI: 10.1006/viro.1994.1560.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAmino Acid SequenceBase SequenceCD4 AntigensGlycoproteinsHeLa CellsHIV-1Human Immunodeficiency Virus ProteinsHumansMembrane GlycoproteinsMolecular Sequence DataProtein Structure, TertiaryRecombinant Fusion ProteinsRecombinant ProteinsViral Envelope ProteinsViral Regulatory and Accessory ProteinsConceptsCytoplasmic domainTransmembrane domainHybrid proteinHeterologous protein degradationVesicular stomatitis virus glycoproteinRapid degradationAdditional hybridsProtein degradationExtracellular domainProtein VpuRelated sequencesVpu proteinDegradation systemEndoplasmic reticulumVSV GVpu expressionProteinVpuTransmembraneVirus glycoproteinRecent studiesDomainHuman immunodeficiency virus type 1Immunodeficiency virus type 1Degradation
1988
Effects of altered cytoplasmic domains on transport of the vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein are transferable to other proteins.
Guan J, Ruusala A, Cao H, Rose J. Effects of altered cytoplasmic domains on transport of the vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein are transferable to other proteins. Molecular And Cellular Biology 1988, 8: 2869-2874. PMID: 2841589, PMCID: PMC363506, DOI: 10.1128/mcb.8.7.2869.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsVesicular stomatitis virus glycoproteinEndoplasmic reticulumCytoplasmic domainVesicular stomatitis virus G proteinMembrane-anchored formVirus G proteinVirus glycoproteinMutant proteinsProtein foldingCytoplasmic sideSecretory proteinsCytoplasmic mutationsG proteinsProteinReticulumDifferent assaysMonomeric structureDetectable effectMutationsSedimentation coefficientRecent studies