A polyomavirus tumor-specific transplantation antigen (TSTA) epitope is situated within the N-terminal amino acid sequence common to middle and small T-antigens
- 1 October 1988
- Vol. 166 (2) , 616-619
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0042-6822(88)90537-5
Abstract
No abstract availableThis publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Immunization against the polyoma tumor‐specific transplantation antigen (TSTA) with polyoma T‐antigensInternational Journal of Cancer, 1988
- Studies on the polyoma tumor-specific transplantation antigen (TSTA): Selection and characterization of TSTA-negative segregants from somatic hybridsInternational Journal of Cancer, 1987
- Tumour prevention and rejection with recombinant vacciniaNature, 1987
- The epitopes of influenza nucleoprotein recognized by cytotoxic T lymphocytes can be defined with short synthetic peptidesCell, 1986
- Cytotoxic T cell recognition of the influenza nucleoprotein and hemagglutinin expressed in transfected mouse L cellsCell, 1984
- Studies on the polyoma-virus-induced tumor-specific transplantation antigen (TSTA) - does middle or large T-antigen play a role?International Journal of Cancer, 1984
- Simian virus 40 specific cytotoxic lymphocyte clones localize two distinct TSTA sites on cells synthesizing a 48 kD SV40 T antigenVirology, 1984
- Coding potential and regulatory signals of the polyoma virus genomeNature, 1980
- Untransformed rat cells containing free and integrated dna of a polyoma nontransforming (Hr-t) mutantCell, 1979
- Mutants of SV40 with an altered small t protein are reduced in their ability to transform cellsCell, 1978