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1.
Ultaviolet enhanced (Weigle) reactivation of UV-irradiated herpes simplex virus in UV-irradiated CV-1 monkey kidney cell monolayers was decreased by caffeine. X-ray enhanced reactivation of UV-irradiated virus in X-irradiated monolayers (X-ray reactivation) and UV- or X-ray-inactivated capacity of the cells to support unirradiated virus plaque formation were unaffected by caffeine. The results suggest that a caffeine-sensitive process is necessary for the expression of Weigle reactivation for herpes virus. Since cafeine did not significantly affect X-ray reactivation, different mechanisms may be responsible for the expression of Weigle reactivation and X-ray reactivation.  相似文献   

2.
The capacity of monolayers of both normal human and xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) filbroblasts to support plaque formation by herpes simplex virus was decreased when the monolayers were ultraviolet (UV) irradiated and infected with virus. Fibroblasts of XP complementation groups A, B, and D were sensitive to UV, being 4-6 fold more sensitive than either fibroblasts of XP complementation group C or fibroblasts from a normal individual. When the monolayers were irradiated 4 days prior to infection, the capacity of normal fibroblasts to support herpes virus growth recovered, whereas the capacity of the XP strains decreased further compared to that measured when infection immediately followed irradiation. Concurrent experiments with UV-irradiated herpes virus showed that the survival of this virus did not increase when infection by irradiated virus immediately followed irradiation of the monolayers. However, if the monolayers were irradiated 4 days prior to infection, the survival of this virus increased by a factor of nearly 2. Such Weigle reactivation (WR) occurred at lower fluences to the XP fibroblasts than to normal fibroblasts, suggesting that WR results from residual cellular DNA damage left after excision repair.  相似文献   

3.
Host-cell reactivation (HCR) of UV-irradiated herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2), capacity of UV-irradiated cells to support HSV-2 plaque formation and UV-enhanced reactivation (UVER) of UV-irradiated HSV-2 were examined in fibroblasts from 4 patients with Cockayne syndrome (CS), 5 with xeroderma pigmentosum and 5 normals. All UV-survival curves for HSV-2 plaque formation showed 2 components. HCR was similar to normal for the XP variant strain and the 2 CS strains tested, but substantially reduced in the 4 excision-deficient XP strains. The capacity of UV-irradiated fibroblasts to support HSV-2 plaque formation was determined by UV-irradiating fibroblast monolayers with various doses of UV and 48 h later, infecting the monolayers with unirradiated HSV-2. The D37 values for the delayed-capacity curves so obtained were in the range 8.6-12.4 J/m2 for the normal strains, 2.8-3.2 J/m2 for the CS strains, 6.7 J/m2 for an XP variant strain and between 0.3 and 1.5 for the XP excision-deficient strains tested. These results indicate that delayed capacity for HSV-2 plaque formation is a more sensitive assay than HCR in the detection of cellular DNA-repair deficiency for XP and CS. For the examination of UVER, fibroblasts were irradiated with various UV doses and subsequently infected with either unirradiated or UV-irradiated HSV and scored for plaque formation 2 days later. UVER expression was maximum when the delay between UV-irradiation of the cells and HSV infection was 48 h. The magnitude of UVER expression was also found to be dependent on the UV dose to the cells and increased with increasing UV dose to the virus. Using a UV dose to the virus resulting in a plaque survival of about 10(-2) on unirradiated cells, the the maximum UVER factor had a mean value of 1.3 for the normal strains following a dose of 15 J/m2 to the cells. Somewhat higher UVER values were found for all the patient strains tested and resulted from lower UV doses to the cells than for normal strains. Maximum UVER factors for the CS strains ranged from 2.2 to 3.3 at a dose of 5 J/m2 to the cells, for the XP excision-deficient strains; 2.1 to 2.6 at doses of 0.5 to 2.5 J/m2 to the cells and for the XP variant strain tested; 2.5 at UV dose of 10 J/m2 to the cells.  相似文献   

4.
Mutagenic repair in mammalian cells was investigated by determining the mutagenesis of UV-irradiated or unirradiated herpes simplex virus in UV-irradiated CV-1 monkey kidney cells. These results were compared with the results for UV-enhanced virus reactivation (UVER) in the same experimental situation. High and low multiplicities of infection were used to determine the effects of multiplicity reactivation (MR). UVER and MR were readily demonstrable and were approximately equal in amount in an infectious center assay. For this study, a forward-mutation assay was developed to detect virus mutants resistant to iododeoxycytidine (ICdR), probably an indication of the mutant virus being defective at its thymidine kinase locus. ICdR-resistant mutants did not have a growth advantage over wild-type virus in irradiated or unirradiated cells. Thus, higher fractions of mutant virus indicated greater mutagenesis during virus repair and/or replication. The data showed that: (1) unirradiated virus was mutated in unirradiated cells, providing a background level of mutagenesis; (2) unirradiated virus was mutated about 40% more in irradiated cells, indicating that virus replication (DNA synthesis?) became more mutagenic as a result of cell irradiation; (3) irradiated virus was mutated much more (about 6-fold) than unirradiated virus, even in unirradiated cells; (4) cell irradiation did not change the mutagenesis of irradiated virus except at high multiplicity of infection. High multiplicity of infection did not lead to higher mutagenesis in unirradiated cells. Thus the data did not demonstrate UVER or MR alone to be either error-free or error-prone. When the two processes were present simultaneously, they were mutagenic.  相似文献   

5.
The induction of phenotypic wild-type revertants in the progeny of an unirradiated or UV-irradiated temperature-sensitive late mutant of simian virus 40 was studied after low multiplicity passages in normal or UV-irradiated confluent monkey kidney cells. The production of wild-type revertants in the progeny of undamaged tsBC245 was followed by infecting the cells at distinct times after irradiation of the cells. Mutation frequencies reached a maximum when infection was delayed for 3--4 days after irradiation of the host cells, and declined gradually thereafter. Virus grown in unirradiated cells did not show such an alteration in mutation frequency. The temporarily higher mutation frequency of virus in UV-pretreated cells is due to a transient mutator activity operating in these cells rather than to an increased number of replications performed in UV-irradiated cells. A similar time course was found for the reactivation of UV-damaged SV40. This might suggest that reactivation and mutagenesis are manifestations of the same process. The yield of mutants due to irradiation of the virus alone was enhanced when infection was delayed for some days after the cells reached confluency; UV pretreatment of the host cells did not enhance the level of mutation obtained by UV irradiation of the virus.  相似文献   

6.
Correlation of increased nuclease activity with enhanced virus reactivation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
An increase in nuctease activity, which degraded both unirradiated and ultraviolet (UV)-irradiated DNA, was observed in the extract of monkey Vero cells after irradiation with an appropriate amount of UV. In contrast, no increase was observed with mouse L cells. Neither DNA polymerases nor uracil-DNA glycosylase was enhanced but rather suppressed by UV irradiation in both cell lines. Cytological studies showed that, in Vero cells, the reactivation of UV-irradiated herpes simplex virus was markedly enhanced by irradiating cells with UV before infection. However, no enhancement was observed with L cells. These results suggest that an increase in nuclease activity may be one of underlying mechanisms for the enhanced reactivation of DNA viruses.  相似文献   

7.
Enhanced reactivation (ER) and enhanced mutagenesis (EM) of herpes simplex virus type 1 were studied simultaneously in UV-irradiated stationary cultures of diploid normal human and xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) fibroblasts. Mutagenesis was assayed with unirradiated herpes simplex virus type 1 as a probe in a forward mutation assay (resistance to iododeoxycytidine). Dose-response studies showed that ER increased with the UV dose given to the virus. Optimal reactivation levels were obtained when normal cells and XP variant cells were exposed to a UV dose of 8 J . m-2 and the virus was irradiated with 150 J . m-2. Repair-deficient XP cells of complementation groups A, C, and D showed optimal reactivation levels with a UV dose to the cells of 1.0 J . m-2 and a UV dose to the virus of 40 J . m-2. The time course of appearance of ER and EM was also studied, both in the normal and XP cells. In all cell types except the XP variant cells, EM followed similar kinetics of appearance as did ER. Maximal activities occurred when infection was delayed 1 or 2 days after cell treatment. In XP variant cells, however, maximal expression of the EM function was significantly delayed with respect to ER. The results indicate that ER and EM are transiently expressed in normal and repair-deficient XP cells. Although both phenomena may be triggered by the same cellular event, ER and EM appear to be separate processes that occur independently of each other.  相似文献   

8.
UV-inducible DNA repair in the cyanobacteria Anabaena spp.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Strains of the filamentous cyanobacteria Anabaena spp. were capable of very efficient photoreactivation of UV irradiation-induced damage to DNA. Cells were resistant to several hundred joules of UV irradiation per square meter under conditions that allowed photoreactivation, and they also photoreactivated UV-damaged cyanophage efficiently. Reactivation of UV-irradiated cyanophage (Weigle reactivation) also occurred; UV irradiation of host cells greatly enhanced the plaque-forming ability of irradiated phage under nonphotoreactivating conditions. Postirradiation incubation of the host cells under conditions that allowed photoreactivation abolished the ability of the cells to perform Weigle reactivation of cyanophage N-1. Mitomycin C also induced Weigle reactivation of cyanophage N-1, but nalidixic acid did not. The inducible repair system (defined as the ability to perform Weigle reactivation of cyanophages) was relatively slow and inefficient compared with photoreactivation.  相似文献   

9.
K Takimoto 《Mutation research》1983,121(3-4):159-166
The frequency of forward mutation of unirradiated, UV-irradiated or gamma-irradiated herpes virus was determined after infecting UV-irradiated or unirradiated CV-1 monkey kidney cells, to investigate the correlation between UV-enhanced reactivation (UVER) and mutagenesis. UV-irradiation to cells had no effect on mutation frequency of irradiated virus even in the conditions in which UVER was maximally expressed for the survival of UV-irradiated virus.  相似文献   

10.
The reactivation of UV-irradiated herpes simplex virus (HSV) was investigated in irradiated and unirradiated transformed hamster cells in which infectious simian virus 40 (SV40) can be induced. Reactivation was enhanced when the cells were treated with UV light or mitomycin C prior to infection with HSV. The IV dose-response curve of this enhanced reactivation was strikingly similar to that found for induction of SV40 virus synthesis in cells treated under identical condictions. This is the first time that two SOS functions described in bacteria have been demonstrated in a single mammalian cell line.  相似文献   

11.
groE genes affect SOS repair in Escherichia coli.   总被引:7,自引:5,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Repair of UV-irradiated bacteriophage in Escherichia coli by Weigle reactivation requires functional recA+ and umuD+C+ genes. When the cells were UV irradiated, the groE heat shock gene products, GroES and GroEL, were needed for at least 50% of the Weigle reactivation of the single-stranded DNA phage S13. Because of repression of the umuDC and recA genes, Weigle reactivation is normally blocked by the lexA3(Ind-) mutation (which creates a noncleavable LexA protein), but it was restored by a combination of a high-copy-number umuD+C+ plasmid and a UV dose that increases groE expression. Maximal reactivation was achieved by elevated amounts of the Umu proteins, which was accomplished in part by UV-induced expression of the groE genes. By increasing the number of copies of the umuD+C+ genes, up to 50% of the normal amount of reactivation of S13 was achieved in an unirradiated recA+ host.  相似文献   

12.
The inactivation by ultraviolet (UV) light irradiation of mycoplasma cells of five human strains was monitored by investigating the colony-forming ability. The survival curves of five strains tested indicated that the cells of Mycoplasma buccale only are single and homogenously susceptible to UV light. The effect of the repair inhibitor, caffeine, on the colony-forming ability of UV-irradiated cells was investigated with M. buccale because of its homogenous susceptibility to UV light. The colony formation of irradiated cells was markedly depressed by post-irradiation treatment with caffeine at concentrations that had little or no effect on the colony formation of unirradiated cells. The colony-forming units (CFU) of UV-irradiated cells which were kept in broth without caffeine in the dark increased without a lag as the time in the dark increased. The colony-forming ability of the irradiated cells completely recovered after 3 hr in the dark. However, when irradiated cells were kept in the presence of caffeine, no increase in their CFU was observed. The mode of action of caffeine on UV-irradiated cells closely resembles that described for other organisms which possess dark reactivation systems for UV-induced damage in deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). Thus, the results obtained provide evidence for the existence of a dark repair function in M. buccale.  相似文献   

13.
U.v. irradiation of human NB-E cells results in enhanced mutagenesis and enhanced reactivation of u.v.-irradiated H-1 virus grown in those cells ( Cornelis et al., 1982). This paper reports a similar study using herpes simplex virus (HSV) in NB-E cells. The mutation frequency of HSV (resistance of virus plaque formation to 40 micrograms/ml iododeoxycytidine ) increased approximately linearly with exposure of the virus to u.v. radiation. HSV grown in unirradiated cells gave a slope of 1.8 X 10(-5)m2/J, with 3.2 X 10(-5)m2/J for HSV grown in cells irradiated (3 J/m2) 24 h before infection. There was no evidence for mutagenesis of unirradiated virus by irradiated cells, as seen with H-1 virus. Enhanced reactivation of irradiated HSV in parallel cultures increased virus survival, manifested as a change in slope of the final component of the two-component survival curve from a D0 of 27 J/m2 in unirradiated cells to 45 J/m2 in irradiated cells. Thus, enhanced mutagenesis and enhanced reactivation occurred for irradiated HSV in NB-E cells. The difference in the enhanced mutagenesis of HSV (dependent on damaged DNA sites) and of H-1 virus (primarily independent of damaged DNA sites) is discussed in terms of differences in DNA polymerases.  相似文献   

14.
Do host cell repair processes affect the mutagenesis of UV-irradiated virus in human cells? The answer was obtained by investigating the mutagenesis of UV-irradiated herpes simplex virus after the irradiated virus was grown in human cells that possess normal repair capacity (normal) or lack excision repair (XPA) or post-replication repair (XP var). Evidence is presented which indicate that XPA cells express no host cell reactivation, while XP var cells express the normal level. Viral mutagenesis was measured as the fraction of the progeny of the surviving virus capable of plaque formation in the presence of iododeoxycytidine. In the normal and XPA cells mutagenesis of the irradiated virus increased linearly with UV exposure. The UV exposure needed to yield a given mutagenesis level for virus grown in XPA cells was much lower than that for virus grown in normal cells. However, when the mutation frequencies were compared at similar virus survival levels, the data from virus grown in normal cells and in XPA cells were indistinguishable. Mutagenesis in XP var cells increased as dose squared and was similar in magnitude to that in normal cells. Thus the excision repair of normal cells which provided host cell reactivation by removing lethal UV damage also removed mutagenic lesions from the virus with the same efficiency, while the repair deficiency of XP var cells had a minor role in host cell reactivation and in mutagenesis. This demonstrates that in human cells host cell reactivation by excision repair is primarily an error-free process.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The survival of UV-irradiated cholera phage e5 was found to increase when the host cells, Vibrio cholerae MAK757, were exposed to a low dose of UV irradiation before phage infection (Weigle reactivation), indicating the existence of a UV-inducible DNA repair pathway (SOS repair) in V. cholerae MAK757. The induction signal generated by UV irradiation was transient in nature and lasted about 20–30 min at 37°C. Maximal weigle reactivation of the phage was obtained when the host cells were irradiated with a UV dose of 16 J/m2. V. cholerae MAK757 was also found to possess efficient photoreactivation and host cell reactivation of UV-damaged DNA in phage e5.  相似文献   

16.
Vibrio cholerae lysogenic kappa phage was inactivated by X-ray (60 kV) in a dose-dependent manner, the inactivation dose leading to 37% survival (D37) in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), pH 7.4, being 0.36 kGy. The phages were significantly protected against X-ray irradiation when histidine or cysteine or both were present in PBS or when phages were irradiated in nutrient broth. Maximum protection was offered when both histidine (10.0 mM) and cysteine (10.0 mM) were present in PBS (dose enhancement factor being 4.17). The X-irradiated kappa phages also underwent a small but significant Weigle reactivation and also Weigle mutagenesis in the UV-irradiated V. cholerae host H218Smr. The Weigle factor or the frequency of clear-plaque mutants increased with increasing UV dose, attained a maximum at a UV dose of 2.4 J m-2, and thereafter decreased gradually with a further increase of the UV dose. The X-ray dose (D)--survival (S) curves could be empirically described by the equation S = exp[-(aD + bD2)], where a and b are constants depending on the irradiation conditions, and a good agreement between the theoretical curves and experimental data was obtained.  相似文献   

17.
A Chinese boy was identified to be suffering from progeria (Hutchinson-Gilford syndrome), the first case of the disease ever reported in China. Cells originating from the patient had a reduced amount of unscheduled DNA synthesis after irradiation with ultraviolet light (UV). The fractions of the progeria cells surviving against UV irradiation measured by colony-forming ability, and the host-cell reactivation capacity of the progeria cells, measured by the plaque formation of UV-irradiated herpes simplex virus were lower than those measured in normal cells. The progeria cells appear to have a reduced capacity to repair UV excision damage.  相似文献   

18.
The survival of UV-irradiated simian virus 40 (SV40) is higher in UV-irradiated than in non-irradiated monolayers of BSC-1 monkey cells. A similar reactivation is found when cells are infected with SV40-DNA, suggesting that reactivation acts on viral DNA. The enhanced reactivation of UV-irradiated SV40 and SV40-DNA is optimal when infection is delayed for 2–3 days after irradiation of the cells.UV-pretreated cells infected with SV40-DNA produce more virus than infected control cells; the time curve of this process is similar to that found for enhanced virus reactivation and suggests that facilitated virus production in UV-irradiated cells and enhanced virus reactivation might be manifestations of the same process.If the non-irradiated SV40 thermosensitive mutant BC245 is propagated in UV-irradiated BSC-1 cells the rate of back mutation to phenotypically wild-type is increased compared with that of the control. This suggests that an inducible error-prone system is functional in these cells. When the UV-irradiated tsBC245 is propagated in non-irradiated cells the reversion frequency is greatly enhanced, which suggests that either the introduction of UV-irradiated SV40-DNA is sufficient to induce an error-generating system, or that a constitutive error-prone mechanism is operative on this DNA.  相似文献   

19.
The DNA-repair capabilities of baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells were investigated by comparing the reactivation of irradiated herpes simplex virus type I (HSV1) in BHK cells with its reactivation in mouse fibroblasts and in normal and repairdeficient human diploid fibroblasts. BHK cells were found to have an intermediate ability to reactive UV-irradiated HSV1 (the viral Do was 14 J/m2) relative to normal human fibroblasts (viral Do = 19 J/m2) and xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) group A cells (viral Do = 4.5 J/m2). With mouse L929 cells as the host, the response of the UV-irradiated virus was biphasic with Dos of 4.6 and 30 J/m2 for the low- and high-dose components respectively. In contrast to the response following UV radiation, γ-irradiated HSV1 was similarly reactivated by BHK and normal human cells (the Dos for the irradiated virus in BHK and CRl 1106 were 55 and 51 krad, respectively, whereas xeroderma pigmentosum cells were slightly less efficient in the repair of γ-irradiated virus (Do = 45 krad). UV irradiation of BHK host cells 0–48 h prior to infection enhanced the reactivation of UV-irradiated HSV.  相似文献   

20.
Aphidicolin is a potent inhibitor of both host cell DNA polymerase alpha and herpes simplex virus (HSV)-induced DNA polymerase but has no effect on DNA polymerases beta and gamma of host cells. By using an aphidicolin-resistant mutant (Aphr) of HSV, a possible involvement of DNA polymerase alpha in host cell reactivation of UV-damaged HSV was studied. Plaque formation by UV-irradiated Aphr was markedly inhibited by 1 microgram of aphidicolin per ml, which did not affect the plating efficiency of nonirradiated Aphr. Aphidicolin added before 12 h postinfection inhibited plaque formation by irradiated Aphr, which became aphidicolin insensitive after 36 h postinfection. The results strongly suggest that host cell DNA polymerase alpha is involved in the repair of UV-irradiated HSV DNA.  相似文献   

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