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The adenovirus origin of DNA replication contains three functionally distinct sequence domains (A, B, and C) that are essential for initiation of DNA synthesis. Previous studies have shown that domain B contains the recognition site for nuclear factor I (NF-I), a cellular protein that is required for optimal initiation. In the studies reported here, we used highly purified NF-I, prepared by DNA recognition site affinity chromatography (P. J. Rosenfeld and T. J. Kelly, Jr., J. Biol. Chem. 261:1398-1408, 1986), to investigate the cellular protein requirements for initiation of viral DNA replication. Our data demonstrate that while NF-I is essential for efficient initiation in vitro, other cellular factors are required as well. A fraction derived from HeLa cell nuclear extract (BR-FT fraction) was shown to contain all the additional cellular proteins required for the complete reconstitution of the initiation reaction. Analysis of this complementing fraction by a gel electrophoresis DNA-binding assay revealed the presence of two site-specific DNA-binding proteins, ORP-A and ORP-C, that recognized sequences in domains A and C, respectively, of the viral origin. Both proteins were purified by DNA recognition site affinity chromatography, and the boundaries of their binding sites were defined by DNase I footprint analysis. Additional characterization of the recognition sequences of ORP-A, NF-I, and ORP-C was accomplished by determining the affinity of the proteins for viral origins containing deletion and base substitution mutations. ORP-C recognized a sequence between nucleotides 41 and 51 of the adenovirus genome, and analysis of mutant origins indicated that efficient initiation of replication is dependent on the presence of a high-affinity ORP-C-binding site. The ORP-A recognition site was localized to the first 12 base pairs of the viral genome within the minimal origin of replication. These data provide evidence that the initiation of adenovirus DNA replication involves multiple protein-DNA interactions at the origin.  相似文献   

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Purification of nuclear factor I by DNA recognition site affinity chromatography   总被引:107,自引:0,他引:107  
Nuclear factor I (NF-I) is a cellular protein that enhances the initiation of adenovirus DNA replication in vitro. The enhancement of initiation correlates with the ability of NF-I to bind a specific nucleotide sequence within the viral origin of replication. We have developed a method for the purification of NF-I which is based upon the high affinity interaction between the protein and its recognition site. This approach may be generally applicable to the purification of other site-specific DNA binding proteins. The essential feature of the method is a two-step column chromatographic procedure in which proteins are first fractionated on an affinity matrix consisting of nonspecific (Escherichia coli) DNA and then on a matrix that is highly enriched in the specific DNA sequence that is recognized by NF-I. During the first step NF-I coelutes with proteins that have similar general affinity for DNA. During the second step NF-I elutes at a much higher ionic strength than the contaminating nonspecific DNA binding proteins. The DNA recognition site affinity matrix used in the second step is prepared from a plasmid (pKB67-88) that contains 88 copies of the NF-I binding site. This plasmid was constructed by means of a novel cloning strategy that generates concatenated NF-I binding sites arranged exclusively in a direct head to tail configuration. Using this purification scheme, we have obtained a 2400-fold purification of NF-I from crude HeLa nuclear extract with a 57% recovery of specific DNA binding activity. Throughout the purification procedure NF-I retained the ability to enhance the efficiency of initiation of adenovirus DNA replication in vitro. Electrophoresis of the purified fraction on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels revealed a population of related polypeptides that ranged in apparent molecular weight from 66,000 to 52,000. The native molecular weight of NF-I deduced from gel filtration and glycerol sedimentation studies is 55,000 and the frictional ratio is 1.3. These results suggest that NF-I exists as a globular monomer in solution.  相似文献   

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Nuclear factor I from HeLa cells, a protein with enhancing function in adenovirus DNA replication, and the chicken TGGCA protein are specific DNA-binding proteins that were first detected by independent methods and that appeared to have similar DNA sequence specificity. To test whether they are homologous proteins from different species we have compared (i) their DNA binding properties and (ii) their function in reconstituted adenovirus DNA replication systems. Using deletion and substitution mutants derived from the DNA binding site on the adenovirus 2 inverted terminal repeat, it was found that the two proteins protect the same 24-nucleotide region of both strands against DNase I digestion and that they have identical minimal recognition sequences of 15 bp containing dyad symmetry. Like nuclear factor I, the TGGCA protein enhances the initiation reaction of adenovirus 2 DNA replication in vitro in a DNA recognition site-dependent manner.  相似文献   

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Human CCAAT-binding proteins have heterologous subunits   总被引:131,自引:0,他引:131  
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Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) leader RNA and a synthetic oligodeoxynucleotide of the same sequence were found to inhibit the replication of adenovirus DNA in vitro. In contrast, the small RNA transcribed by the VSV defective interfering particle DI-011 did not prevent adenovirus DNA replication. The inhibition produced by leader RNA was at the level of preterminal protein (pTP)-dCMP complex formation, the initiation step of adenovirus DNA replication. Initiation requires the adenovirus pTP-adenovirus DNA polymerase complex (pTP-Adpol), the adenovirus DNA-binding protein, and nuclear factor I. Specific replication in the presence of leader RNA was restored when the concentration of adenovirus-infected or uninfected nuclear extract was increased or by the addition of purified pTP-Adpol or HeLa cell DNA polymerase alpha-primase to inhibited replication reactions. Furthermore, the activities of both purified DNA polymerases could be inhibited by the leader sequence. These results suggest that VSV leader RNA is the viral agent responsible for inhibition of adenovirus and possibly cellular DNA replication during VSV infection.  相似文献   

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In-vivo studies have demonstrated that adenovirus type 2 and adenovirus type 4 have different DNA sequence requirements for the initiation of DNA replication. To investigate the basis of these differences an in-vitro system has been developed which will faithfully initiate adenovirus type 4 DNA replication. A plasmid containing 140 base-pairs of the right terminus of adenovirus type 4 supported initiation of DNA replication in vitro, provided that the plasmid was linearized in such a way as to locate the viral terminal sequences at the molecular ends of the DNA. Initiation by adenovirus type 4-infected cell extracts was also supported by a plasmid containing the complete adenovirus type 2 inverted terminal repeat (ITR). Deletion analysis of both adenovirus types 2 and 4 ITRs revealed that only the terminal 18 base-pairs of the genomes (perfectly conserved between the 2 viruses) were required for initiation in vitro. Thus, initiation was not enhanced by the presence of either the NFI site, the NFIII site or both sites together. Fractionation of a HeLa cell nuclear extract, by ion-exchange chromatography, identified a nuclear factor that stimulated the initiation reaction four- to fivefold. The stimulatory factor did not correspond to either of the cellular proteins NFI or NFIII which stimulate adenovirus type 2 DNA replication in vitro. Initiation in vitro was also supported by single-stranded DNA templates, albeit at a lower efficiency. Studies with synthetic oligonucleotides indicated a surprising specificity for initiation: whereas the strand used as template during initiation in vivo was active as a template for initiation in vitro, the complementary strand was inactive.  相似文献   

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The 72-kilodalton adenovirus DNA-binding protein (DBP) binds to single-stranded DNA as well as to RNA and double-stranded DNA and is essential for the replication of viral DNA. We investigated the binding of DBP to double-stranded DNA by gel retardation analysis. By using a 114-base-pair DNA fragment, five or six different complexes were observed by gel retardation. The mobility of these complexes is dependent on the DBP concentration, suggesting that the complexes arise by sequential binding of DBP molecules to the DNA. In contrast to binding to single-stranded DNA, the binding of DBP to double-stranded DNA appears to be noncooperative. DBP binds to linear DNA as well as to circular DNA, while linear DNA containing the adenovirus terminal protein was also recognized. No specificity for adenovirus origin sequences was observed. To study whether the binding of DBP could influence initiation of DNA replication, we analyzed the effect of DBP on the binding of nuclear factor I (NFI) and NFIII, two sequence-specific origin-recognizing proteins that enhance initiation. At subsaturating levels of NFI, DBP increases the rate of binding of NFI considerably, while no effect was seen on NFIII. This stimulation of NFI binding is specific for DBP and was not observed with another protein (NFIV), which forms a similar DNA-multimeric protein complex. In agreement with enhanced NFI binding, DBP stimulates initiation of adenovirus DNA replication in vitro especially strongly at subsaturating NFI concentrations. We explain our results by assuming that DBP forms a complex with origin DNA that promotes formation of an alternative DNA structure, thereby facilitating the binding of NFI as well as the initiation of DNA replication via NFI.  相似文献   

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A rapid and quantitative nitrocellulose filter-binding assay is described for the detection of nuclear factor I, a HeLa cell sequence-specific DNA-binding protein required for the initiation of adenovirus DNA replication. In this assay, the abundant nonspecific DNA-binding activity present in unfractionated HeLa nuclear extracts was greatly reduced by preincubation of these extracts with a homopolymeric competitor DNA. Subsequently, specific DNA-binding activity was detected as the preferential retention of a labeled 48-base-pair DNA fragment containing a functional nuclear factor I binding site compared with a control DNA fragment to which nuclear factor I did not bind specifically. This specific DNA-binding activity was shown to be both quantitative and time dependent. Furthermore, the conditions of this assay allowed footprinting of nuclear factor I in unfractionated HeLa nuclear extracts and quantitative detection of the protein during purification. Using unfrozen HeLa cells and reagents known to limit endogenous proteolysis, nuclear factor I was purified to near homogeneity from HeLa nuclear extracts by a combination of standard chromatography and specific DNA affinity chromatography. Over a 400-fold purification of nuclear factor I, on the basis of the specific activity of both sequence-specific DNA binding and complementation of adenovirus DNA replication in vitro, was affected by this purification. The most highly purified fraction was greatly enriched for a polypeptide of 160 kilodaltons on silver-stained sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. Furthermore, this protein cosedimented with specific DNA-binding activity on glycerol gradients. That this fraction indeed contained nuclear factor I was demonstrated by both DNase I footprinting and its function in the initiation of adenovirus DNA replication. Finally, the stoichiometry of specific DNA binding by nuclear factor I is shown to be most consistent with 2 mol of the 160-kilodalton polypeptide binding per mol of nuclear factor I-binding site.  相似文献   

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The adenovirus single-stranded DNA-binding protein (DBP) is an essential factor in viral DNA replication. Three temperature-sensitive (ts) adenoviruses (Ad2+ND1ts23, Ad2ts111A, and Ad5ts125) are known to have single amino acid substitutions in their DBPs that result in defective DNA replication at the nonpermissive temperature. To elucidate the mechanism(s) involved in the ts phenotype, we purified the three mutant DBPs and studied their DNA-binding properties and their ability to support DNA replication in an in vitro system. The results confirm that the three ts DBPs were incapable of supporting DNA replication at the nonpermissive temperature (40 degrees C). The defect was found at both the initiation and elongation steps of DNA replication. The 2-fold stimulation of pTP.dCMP formation by the DBP was lost by prior heating of the ts DBPs. The pronounced effect of the DBP on the early elongation process was severely diminished, but not abolished, by prior heating to 40 degrees C. The functional change at 40 degrees C was irreversible, as the ts DBPs preincubated at 40 degrees C were no longer active when assayed at 30 degrees C. Upon heating to 40 degrees C, all three ts DBPs lost their ability to bind to oligonucleotides, although they still retained some binding activity for large single-stranded DNAs such as M13 DNA. Thus, the inability of these three ts DBPs to support DNA replication is attributable to their altered DNA-binding properties.  相似文献   

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