1992
The central hydrophobic domain of the bovine papillomavirus E5 transforming protein can be functionally replaced by many hydrophobic amino acid sequences containing a glutamine
Kulke R, Horwitz B, Zibello T, DiMaio D. The central hydrophobic domain of the bovine papillomavirus E5 transforming protein can be functionally replaced by many hydrophobic amino acid sequences containing a glutamine. Journal Of Virology 1992, 66: 505-511. PMID: 1727496, PMCID: PMC238311, DOI: 10.1128/jvi.66.1.505-511.1992.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsHydrophobic amino acidsAmino acidsE5 proteinRandom hydrophobic sequencesHydrophobic domainRodent fibroblast cell linesCentral hydrophobic domainHydrophobic amino acid sequenceCarboxyl-terminal amino acidsMouse C127 cellsAmino acid sequenceClasses of mutantsAbsence of glutamineBovine papillomavirus E5Mutant proteinsTransforming proteinDefective mutantsHydrophobic sequenceFibroblast cell lineProtein stabilityAcid sequenceC127 cellsHomodimer formationEfficient transformationProtein
1989
Genetic Evidence that Acute Morphologic Transformation, Induction of Cellular DNA Synthesis, and Focus Formation Are Mediated by a Single Activity of the Bovine Papillomavirus E5 Protein
Settleman J, Fazeli A, Malicki J, Horwitz B, Dimaio D. Genetic Evidence that Acute Morphologic Transformation, Induction of Cellular DNA Synthesis, and Focus Formation Are Mediated by a Single Activity of the Bovine Papillomavirus E5 Protein. Molecular And Cellular Biology 1989, 9: 5563-5572. DOI: 10.1128/mcb.9.12.5563-5572.1989.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchE5 proteinE5 geneCellular DNA synthesisC127 cellsBovine papillomavirus E5 proteinMouse C127 cellsDNA synthesisMorphologic transformationCultured rodent cellsDefective phenotypeMissense mutantsUnstable proteinDefective mutantsGenetic evidenceMutational analysisE5 activityRodent cellsCell cycleViral genesBiochemical activitySerum starvationFoci formationCell transformationGenesContact inhibitionGenetic evidence that acute morphologic transformation, induction of cellular DNA synthesis, and focus formation are mediated by a single activity of the bovine papillomavirus E5 protein.
Settleman J, Fazeli A, Malicki J, Horwitz B, DiMaio D. Genetic evidence that acute morphologic transformation, induction of cellular DNA synthesis, and focus formation are mediated by a single activity of the bovine papillomavirus E5 protein. Molecular And Cellular Biology 1989, 9: 5563-5572. PMID: 2555701, PMCID: PMC363726, DOI: 10.1128/mcb.9.12.5563.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsE5 proteinE5 geneCellular DNA synthesisC127 cellsBovine papillomavirus E5 proteinMouse C127 cellsDNA synthesisMorphologic transformationCultured rodent cellsDefective phenotypeMissense mutantsUnstable proteinDefective mutantsGenetic evidenceMutational analysisE5 activityRodent cellsCell cycleViral genesBiochemical activitySerum starvationCell transformationGenesContact inhibitionVirus multiplicity