132 research outputs found

    Analysis of the DNA-terminal protein from different serotypes of human adenovirus

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    The DNA-terminal proteins from adenovirus type 12, type 3, and type 5 were analyzed after labeling in vitro with 125I by the chloramine T method, and were shown to be serotype specific. We also studied the kinetics of cleavage by alkali of the terminal protein-DNA linkage and showed that the half-time of cleavage with either 0.1 M NaOH or 0.5 M piperidine at 37 degree C is about 15 to 30 min. The substitution of the volatile base piperidine for NaOH in this procedure provided a useful tool for rapid analysis of the labeled protein.</jats:p

    Translation of Poliovirus RNA by an E. coli Cell-free System

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    Characterization of the effect of aphidicolin on adenovirus DNA replication: evidence in support of a protein primer model of initiation.

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    Adenovirus DNA replication is inhibited by aphidicolin but the inhibition clearly has different parameters than the inhibition of purified DNA polymerase alpha. In adenovirus infected Hela cells, 10 micrograms/ml of aphidicolin reduced viral DNA synthesis by 80%. Cellular DNA synthesis was inhibited by 97% at 0.1 microgram/ml. 10 micrograms/ml of drug had no effect on virus yield or late protein synthesis though higher concentrations of drug (50 micrograms/ml) caused an abrupt cessation of late protein synthesis and 100 micrograms/ml reduced virus yield by 3 logs. Concentrations of the drug from 0.5 microgram/ml to 10 micrograms/ml were found to dramatically slow the rate of DNA chain elongation in vitro but not stop it completely, so that over a long period of time net incorporation was reduced only slightly compared to the control. 50 micrograms/ml or 100 micrograms/ml of drug completely inhibited incorporation in vitro. Initiation of viral DNA replication - covalent attachment of dCMP to the preterminal protein - occurs in vitro. This reaction was found to be insensitive to inhibition by aphidicolin. We thus conclude that aphidicolin exerts its effect on adenovirus DNA chain elongation, but not on the primary initiation event of protein priming

    Characterization of deletion mutations in the capsid region of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 that affect particle formation and Gag-Pol precursor incorporation

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    The core of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 is derived from two precursor polyproteins, Pr55gag and Pr160gag-pol. The Gag precursor can assemble into immature virus-like particles when expressed by itself, while the Gag-Pol precursor lacks particle-forming ability. We have shown previously that the Gag precursor is able to "rescue" the Gag-Pol precursor into virus-like particles when the two polyproteins are expressed in the same cell by using separate simian virus 40-based plasmid expression vectors. To understand this interaction in greater detail, we have made deletion mutations in the capsid-coding regions of Gag- and Gag-Pol-expressing plasmids and assayed for the abilities of these precursors to assemble into virus-like particles. When we tested the abilities of Gag-Pol precursors to be incorporated into particles of Gag by coexpressing the precursors, we found that mutant Gag-Pol precursors lacking a conserved region in retroviral capsid proteins, the major homology region (MHR), were excluded from wild-type Gag particles. Mutant precursors lacking MHR were also less efficient in processing the Gag precursor in trans. These results suggest that the MHR is critical for interactions between Gag and Gag-Pol molecules. In contrast to these results, expression of mutated Gag precursors alone showed that deletions in the capsid region, including those which removed the MHR, reduced the efficiency of particle formation by only 40 to 50%. The mutant particles, however, were clearly lighter than the wild type in sucrose density gradients. These results indicate that the requirements for Gag particle formation differ from the ones essential for efficient incorporation of the Gag-Pol precursor into these particles.</jats:p
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