Changes in the surface of virus-induced cells recognized by cytotoxic T cells. I. Minimal requirements for lysis of ectromelia-infected P-815 cells
- PMID: 178048
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3083.1976.tb02988.x
Changes in the surface of virus-induced cells recognized by cytotoxic T cells. I. Minimal requirements for lysis of ectromelia-infected P-815 cells
Abstract
P-815 mastocytoma cells developed susceptibility to immune T-cell-mediated cytolysis shortly after infection by ectromelia virus. Intracellular viral replication and late protein synthesis seem to bu unnecessary events. Interference with early protein synthesis, however, inhibits the development of susceptibility to lysis. The important intracellular events necessary for subsequent cytolysis appear to occur within 1 hour of infection. Virus rendered non-infectious by ultraviolet irradiation but not by gamma irradiation is able to induce these changes. By determining the minimum and essential events of the infectious process which result in T-cell-mediated cytolysis, the task of establishing the molecular changes occurring in the target cell surface membrane necessary for immune T-cell recognition should be simplified.
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