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Comparative Study
. 1990 May;64(5):2064-72.
doi: 10.1128/JVI.64.5.2064-2072.1990.

Multigene families in African swine fever virus: family 110

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Comparative Study

Multigene families in African swine fever virus: family 110

J M Almendral et al. J Virol. 1990 May.

Abstract

The genome of African swine fever virus was screened for the existence of repetitive sequences by hybridization between different cloned restriction fragments covering the viral DNA. Several sets of repeated sequences were detected in fragments located close to the DNA ends. One of these groups of repetitions involved fragments located at both ends of the genome. The remaining groups involved fragments that were located exclusively at the left end. The sequence of a 3.2-kilobase segment spanning from 7.5 to 11 kilobases from the left DNA end, which showed a complex pattern of cross-hybridizations, was determined. Two short and three long blocks of direct repeated sequences were found in this DNA region, which accounted for the hybridization results. The repeated sequences formed a family of five homologous genes with an average length of 116 codons (multigene family 110), one of which had a dimeric structure. Transcripts of the five members of the family were detected both in RNA synthesized in vitro by purified African swine fever virions and in RNA isolated at early times after infection. Comparison of the predicted protein sequences revealed a striking conservation of a cysteine-rich domain in the central part of the proteins. In addition, a highly hydrophobic NH2-terminal sequence present in all the proteins suggests that these proteins are processed through the endoplasmic reticulum.

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References

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