Like many retroviruses, ASLV consists of a lipid envelope containing transmembrane and cell surface
glycoproteins. Enclosed within the envelope is a capsid surrounding single stranded RNA,
integrase,
protease, and
reverse transcriptase, an enzyme that allows for the reversal of genetic transcription. As with all retroviruses, the virus is transcribed from RNA to DNA, instead of DNA to RNA as in normal cellular replication. Viral glycoprotein-receptor interactions are required to initiate membrane fusion of the virus and cell. The surface glycoproteins contain the major domains that interact with the host cell receptor while the transmembrane (TM) glycoproteins anchor the surface glycoproteins to the virus membrane. The TM glycoproteins are directly involved in the fusion of the virus and host membranes for entry. The surface glycoproteins for subgroups A-E are almost identical and include the conservation of all
cysteine amino acid residues. Viral specificity is determined by five hyper variable regions, vr1, vr2, hr1, hr2, and vr3, on the surface glycoproteins. Binding specificity is determined primarily by the hr1 and hr2 regions, with the vr3 region contributing to receptor recognition but not to binding specificity of the viral glycoprotein and cellular receptor. In chicken
chromosomes, three autosomal loci,
t-va,
t-vb, and
t-vc, have been identified which control cell susceptibility of the ASLV virus subgroups A, B, and C respectively. Each of these genes codes for the cellular receptors Tva, Tvb, and Tvc. Tva contains sequences related to the ligand binding region of low-density lipoprotein receptors (LDLR). ALV is genetically closely related to the Rous sarcoma virus (RSV), but unlike RSV, ALV does not contain the
src gene, which codes for a tyrosine kinase, and does not transform the fibroblasts that it infects. Both RSV and ASLV contain the
gag gene, which is common to most retroviruses and encodes for the capsid proteins, and the
pol gene which encodes for the reverse transcriptase enzyme. ALV and some RSVs also contain the
env gene, which encodes a precursor polyprotein that assembles in the
endoplasmic reticulum. The polyproteins are then transported to the Golgi apparatus, glycosylated and cleaved to produce two glycoproteins: one surface and one transmembrane. ==Resources==