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Circles with two tandem long terminal repeats are specifically cleaved by pol gene-associated endonuclease from avian sarcoma and leukosis viruses: nucleotide sequences required for site-specific cleavage.
Authors:G Duyk  M Longiaru  D Cobrinik  R Kowal  P deHaseth  A M Skalka  and J Leis
Abstract:The avian retroviral pol gene-encoded DNA endonuclease (pol-endo) has been shown to selectively cleave the viral long terminal repeat sequences (LTRs) in single-stranded DNA substrates in a region known to be joined to host DNA during integration (G. Duyk, J. Leis, M. Longiaru, and A.M. Skalka, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 80:6745-6749, 1983). The preferred sites of cleavage were mapped to the unique U5/U3 junctions found only in covalently closed circular DNA molecules containing two tandem LTRs. The cuts occurred three nucleotides 5' to the axis of symmetry of the 12-of-15-base-pair nearly perfect inverted repeat which marks the LTR junction. Experiments with double-stranded supercoiled DNA substrates revealed a similar specificity for nicking. Also, the endonuclease associated with the pol cleavage product, pp32, has the same specificity as the alpha beta form. The limits of sequence required for site-selective cleavage near the U5/U3 junction were established with single-stranded DNA substrates. A domain no larger than 44 base pairs allowed site-selective cleavage in each strand in vitro. Recognition of either strand appeared to be independent of the other, and in each case, the critical sequence was asymmetrically distributed with respect to the U5/U3 junction. The predominant contribution was from the U5 domain; this is consistent with its conservation in the LTR sequences of a number of avian sarcoma and leukosis viruses.
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