Lymphoproliferative disease virus of turkeys: sequence analysis and transcriptional activity of the long terminal repeat
- PMID: 2022329
- DOI: 10.1016/0378-1119(91)90122-r
Lymphoproliferative disease virus of turkeys: sequence analysis and transcriptional activity of the long terminal repeat
Abstract
The lymphoproliferative disease virus (LPDV) is the etiological agent of a lymphoproliferative disease that naturally occurs in turkeys. Recently, we have cloned the LPDV provirus and established it as a replication-competent genome devoid of a viral oncogene [Gak et al., J. Virol. 63 (1989) 2877-2880]. This report presents the nucleotide sequence of its long terminal repeat (LTR) and establishes it as a potent transcriptional element. Several features of the LPDV LTR were similar to those found in the LTRs of the avian sarcoma-leukemia viruses (ASLV) and include the primer-binding site (tRNATrp), the polypurine tract, the organization of the polyadenylation signal, the complexities of the U3, R and U5 regions, as well as a potential secondary structure in U5-R. The LTR sequence diverges significantly from the ASLV LTRs, which share a common structure and have extensive sequence homology mainly in the R and U5 domains. These findings support the conclusion that LPDV represents a distinct class of avian retrovirus, evolutionarily related to the ASLV family.
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