Skip to search form
Skip to main content
Skip to account menu
Semantic Scholar
Semantic Scholar's Logo
Search 230,998,355 papers from all fields of science
Search
Sign In
Create Free Account
Viral Protease p15
Known as:
15gag Proteinase
An aspartyl protease that is a portion of the polyprotein encoded by the gag gene found in the retrovirus myeloblastosis-associated virus (MAV; avian…
Expand
National Institutes of Health
Create Alert
Alert
Related topics
Related topics
2 relations
Genes, Viral
Virus
Papers overview
Semantic Scholar uses AI to extract papers important to this topic.
1992
1992
15gag proteinase of myeloblastosis-associated virus: specificity studies with substrate-based inhibitors.
L. Pavlíčková
,
D. Stys
,
+4 authors
P. Štrop
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics
1992
Corpus ID: 35006036
The specificity of the proteinase of myeloblastosis-associated virus (MAV) was studied with (a) 21 substrate-based inhibitors, (b…
Expand
1987
1987
Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of myc gene products after cleavage by viral protease p15.
V. Sovová
,
J. Forchhammer
,
M. Dvorák
,
H. Černá
,
I. Hložánek
Folia biologica
1987
Corpus ID: 22072637
An analysis of myc-specific protein (p58myc), precipitated from cells transformed by virus OK10, by means of two-dimensional gel…
Expand
1982
1982
In vitro cleavage of gag-myc fused protein P110 of a defective leukaemia virus MC29 by retroviral protease p15.
V. Sovová
,
M. Trávníček
,
I. Hložánek
,
H. Černá
Folia biologica
1982
Corpus ID: 10495988
Gag-related proteins were precipitated from 35S-methionine-labelled cells of the PR-2 line derived from a hepatoma induced by…
Expand
Highly Cited
1979
Highly Cited
1979
In vitro cleavage of avian retrovirus gag proteins by viral protease p15.
V. Vogt
,
A. Wight
,
R. Eisenman
Virology
1979
Corpus ID: 40384618
By clicking accept or continuing to use the site, you agree to the terms outlined in our
Privacy Policy
(opens in a new tab)
,
Terms of Service
(opens in a new tab)
, and
Dataset License
(opens in a new tab)
ACCEPT & CONTINUE