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Gene Review

P  -  phosphoprotein

Avian paramyxovirus 6

 
 
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Disease relevance of P

 

High impact information on P

 

Biological context of P

  • An ancient division in the primordial reservoir (wild waterbird species) led to two basal sister clades, class I and II, with genome sizes 15,198 (due to a 12 nucleotide insert in the phosphoprotein gene) and 15,186 nucleotides, respectively [7].
  • This plasmid transcribing antigenome RNA was cotransfected with helper plasmids expressing viral nucleoprotein, phosphoprotein and large protein into cells stably expressing T7 RNA polymerase [8].
 

Anatomical context of P

 

Physical interactions of P

 

Other interactions of P

  • The existence of these transcripts yields a transcription map order of NP, P, M, F0, HN [10].

References

  1. Nucleotide sequence of the phosphoprotein (P) gene of Newcastle disease virus (strain Beaudette C). Daskalakis, S., Menke, J., Stripp, B., Stone, H. Nucleic Acids Res. (1992) [Pubmed]
  2. Retroviral expressed hemagglutinin-neuraminidase protein protects chickens from Newcastle disease virus induced disease. Morrison, T., Hinshaw, V.S., Sheerar, M., Cooley, A.J., Brown, D., McQuain, C., McGinnes, L. Microb. Pathog. (1990) [Pubmed]
  3. Molecular cloning and sequence analysis of the mumps virus gene encoding the P protein: mumps virus P gene is monocistronic. Takeuchi, K., Hishiyama, M., Yamada, A., Sugiura, A. J. Gen. Virol. (1988) [Pubmed]
  4. Mechanism of interferon action. Characterization of sites of phosphorylation in the interferon-induced phosphoprotein P1 from mouse fibroblasts: evidence for two forms of P1. Lasky, S.R., Jacobs, B.L., Samuel, C.E. J. Biol. Chem. (1982) [Pubmed]
  5. The P protein and the nonstructural 38K and 29K proteins of Newcastle disease virus are derived from the same open reading frame. McGinnes, L., McQuain, C., Morrison, T. Virology (1988) [Pubmed]
  6. The use of in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry to study the pathogenesis of various Newcastle disease virus strains and recombinants in embryonated chicken eggs. Oldoni, I., Brown, C.C., King, D.J., Samal, S., Seal, B.S. Microb. Pathog. (2005) [Pubmed]
  7. Third genome size category of avian paramyxovirus serotype 1 (Newcastle disease virus) and evolutionary implications. Czeglédi, A., Ujvári, D., Somogyi, E., Wehmann, E., Werner, O., Lomniczi, B. Virus Res. (2006) [Pubmed]
  8. Characterization of a recombinant Newcastle disease virus expressing the green fluorescent protein. Engel-Herbert, I., Werner, O., Teifke, J.P., Mebatsion, T., Mettenleiter, T.C., Römer-Oberdörfer, A. J. Virol. Methods (2003) [Pubmed]
  9. Regions on nucleocapsid protein of Newcastle disease virus that interact with its phosphoprotein. Kho, C.L., Tan, W.S., Tey, B.T., Yusoff, K. Arch. Virol. (2004) [Pubmed]
  10. Identification of the sequence content of four polycistronic transcripts synthesized in Newcastle disease virus infected cells. Wilde, A., McQuain, C., Morrison, T. Virus Res. (1986) [Pubmed]
 
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