Hydrodynamic diameters of murine mammary, Rous sarcoma, and feline leukemia RNA tumor viruses: studies by laser beat frequency light-scattering spectroscopy and electron microscopy
- 1 February 1976
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 17 (2) , 584-596
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.17.2.584-596.1976
Abstract
We have studied purified preparations of murine mammary tumor virus (MuMTV), Rous sarcoma virus (RSV; Prague strain), and feline leukemia virus (FeLV) by laser beat frequency light-scattering spectroscopy, ultra-centrifugation, and electron microscopy. The laser beat frequency light-scattering spectroscopy measurements yield the light-scattering intensity, weighted diffusion coefficients. The corresponding average hydrodynamic diameters, as calculated from the diffusion coefficients by the Stokes-Einstein equation for MuMTV, RSV, and FeLV, respectively, are: 144 +/- 6 nm, 147 +/- 7 nm, and 168 +/- 6 nm. Portions of the purified RSV and MuMTV preparations, from which light-scattering samples were obtained, and portions of the actual FeLV light-scattering samples were examined by negatively stained, catalase crystal-calibrated electron microscopy. The light-scattering intensity weighted averages of the electron micrograph size distributions were calculated by weighing each size by its theoretical relative scattering intensity, as obtained from published tables computed according to the Mie scattering theory. These averages and the experimentally observed hydrodynamic diameters agreed to within +/- 5%, which is the combined experimental error in the electron microscopic and light-scattering techniques. We conclude that the size distributions of singlet particles observed in the electron micrographs are statistically true representations of the sedimentation-purified solution size distributions. The sedimentation coefficients (S20, w) for MuMTV, RSV, and FeLV, respectively, are: 595 +/- 29S, 689 +/- 35S, and 880 +/- 44S. Virus partial specific volumes were taken as the reciprocals of the buoyant densities, determined in sucrose density gradients. The Svedberg equation was used to calculate particle weights from the measured diffusion and sedimentation coefficients. The particle weights for MuMTV, RSV, and FeLV, respectively, are: (3.17 +/- 0.32) x 10(8), (4.17 +/- 0.42) x 10(8), and (5.50 +/- 0.55) x 10(8) daltons.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Electrophoretic mobilities of RNA tumor viruses. Studies by Doppler-shifted light scattering spectroscopyBiochemistry, 1975
- Biophysical studies of reovirus type 3Virology, 1974
- Biophysical studies of reovirus type 3Virology, 1974
- Intensity fluctuation spectroscopy of laser light scattered by solutions of spherical viruses. R17, Q.beta., BSV, PM2, and T7. II. Diffusion coefficients molecular weights, solvation, and particle dimensionsBiochemistry, 1974
- Intensity fluctuation spectroscopy of laser light scattered by solutions of spherical viruses. R17, Q.beta., BSV, PM2, and T7. I. Light-scattering techniqueBiochemistry, 1974
- Diffusion coefficients and hydrodynamic radii of three spherical RNA viruses by laser light scatteringVirology, 1973
- Effects of pH on the structure of vesicular stomatitis virusVirology, 1973
- Application of laser beat frequency spectroscopy to the detection and characterization of an oncogenic RNA virusBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1972
- Isopycnic zonal centrifugation and characterization of the mouse mammary tumor virus (MTV) in different gradient solutionsVirology, 1970
- An accurate measurement of the catalase crystal period and its use as an internal marker for electron microscopyJournal of Ultrastructure Research, 1967