Characterization of the Tumorlike (T) Antigen Induced by Type 12 Adenovirus

Abstract
The T antigen induced by type 12 adenovirus was purified from KB cells infected in the presence of 10−6m 5-fluoro-2-deoxyuridine to inhibit synthesis of viral capsid antigens. The antigen was purified approximately 200-fold, and the purified product contained only negligible amounts of host-cell contaminants, as judged by the residual radioactivity from 14C-labeled uninfected cells which had been added to infected cells at the initiation of the purification. Immunoelectrophoresis indicated that the purified T-antigen preparation contained a single antigenic species. The T antigen from a hamster cell line (HT-1) derived from a type 12 adenovirus-induced tumor was purified by the same procedure. The T antigens from the two different sources were shown to be immunologically similar by use of a rabbit antiserum prepared against the purified T antigen from infected KB cells and sera from hamsters bearing tumors induced by type 12 adenovirus.