Transfer of purified herpes virus thymidine kinase gene to cultured mouse cells. |
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Authors: | M Wigler S Silverstein L S Lee A Pellicer Y c Cheng R Axel |
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Affiliation: | 1. Institute of Cancer Research Columbia University New York, New York 10032 USA;2. Departments of Microbiology and Pathology College of Physicians and Surgeons Columbia University New York, New York 10032 USA |
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Abstract: | Treatment of Ltk?, mouse L cells deficient in thymidine kinase (tk), with Bam I restriction endonuclease cleaved DNA from herpes simplex virus-1 (HSV-1) produced tk+ clones with a frequency of 10?6/2 μg of HSV-1 DNA. Untreated cells or cells treated with Eco RI restriction endonuclease fragments produced no tk+ clones under the same conditions. The thymidine kinase activities of four independently derived clones were characterized by biochemical and serological techniques. By these criteria, the tk activities were found to be identical to HSV-1 tk and different from host wildtype tk. The tk+ phenotype was stable over several hundred cell generations, although the rate of reversion to the tk? phenotype, as judged by cloning efficiency in the presence of bromodeoxyuridine, was high (1–5 × 10?3). HSV-1 DNA Bam restriction fragments were separated by gel electrophoresis, and virtually all activity, as assayed by transfection, was found to reside in a 3.4 kb fragment. Transformation efficiency with the isolated fragment is 20 fold higher per gene equivalent than with the unfractionated total Bam digest. These results prove the usefulness of transfection assays as a means for the bioassay and isolation of restriction fragments carrying specific genetic information. Cells expressing HSV-1 tk may also provide a useful model system for the detailed analysis of eucaryotic and viral gene regulation. |
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Keywords: | Department of Experimental Therapeutics and Grace Cancer Drug Center Roswell Park Memorial Institute New York State Department of Health Buffalo New York 14263. |
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