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1.
Replicative intermediates in UV-irradiated simian virus 40   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
We have used Simian virus 40 (SV40) as a probe to study the replication of UV-damaged DNA in mammalian cells. Viral DNA replication in infected monkey kidney cells was synchronized by incubating a mutant of SV40 (tsA58) temperature-sensitive for the initiation of DNA synthesis at the restrictive temperature and then adding aphidicolin to temporarily inhibit DNA synthesis at the permissive temperature while permitting pre-replicative events to occur. After removal of the drug, the infected cells were irradiated at 100 J/m2 (254 nm) to produce 6-7 pyrimidine dimers per SV40 genome, and returned to the restrictive temperature to prevent reinitiation of replication from the SV40 origin. Replicative intermediates (RI) were labeled with [3H]thymidine, and isolated by centrifugation in CsCl/ethidium bromide gradients followed by BND-cellulose chromatography. The size distribution of daughter DNA strands in RI isolated shortly after irradiation was skewed towards lengths less than the interdimer spacing in parental DNA; this bias persisted for at least 1 h after irradiation, but disappeared within 3 h, by which time the size of the newly-synthesized DNA exceeded the interdimer distance. No significant excision of dimers from parental strands in either replicative intermediates or Form I (closed circular) DNA molecules was detected. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that replication forks are temporarily blocked by dimers encountered on the leading strand side of the fork, but that daughter strand continuity opposite dimers is eventually established. Evidence was obtained for the generation at late times after irradiation, of Form I molecules in which the daughter DNA strands contain dimers. Thus DNA strand exchange as well as trans-dimer synthesis may be involved in the generation of supercoiled Form I DNA from UV-damaged SV40 replicative intermediates.  相似文献   

2.
We are examining the effects of preirradiation of host (monkey) cells upon the replication of UV-damaged SV40. Control cells and cells preirradiated with low fluences (5 or 10 J/m2) of UV were infected with undamaged SV40, and the immediate effects of a subsequent irradiation were determined. UV inhibited total SV 40 DNA synthesis (incorporation of thymidine into viral DNA) in both preirradiated and control cells, but the extent of inhibition was less in the preirradiated cells. A test fluence of 60 J/m2 to SV40 replicating in preirradiated cells reduced synthesis only as much as a test fluence of 25 J/m2 in control cells. The fraction of recently replicated SV40 molecules that re-entered the replication pool and subsequently completed one round of replication in the first 2 h after UV was also decreased less in the preirradiated cells. Thus preirradiation of the host cell mitigates the immediate inhibitory effects of a subsequent UV exposure upon SV40 replication.  相似文献   

3.
Pyrimidine dimers block simian virus 40 replication forks.   总被引:12,自引:4,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
UV light produces lesions, predominantly pyrimidine dimers, which inhibit DNA replication in mammalian cells. The mechanism of inhibition is controversial: is synthesis of a daughter strand halted at a lesion while the replication fork moves on and reinitiates downstream, or is fork progression itself blocked for some time at the site of a lesion? We directly addressed this question by using electron microscopy to examine the distances of replication forks from the origin in unirradiated and UV-irradiated simian virus 40 chromosomes. If UV lesions block replication fork progression, the forks should be asymmetrically located in a large fraction of the irradiated molecules; if replication forks move rapidly past lesions, the forks should be symmetrically located. A large fraction of the simian virus 40 replication forks in irradiated molecules were asymmetrically located, demonstrating that UV lesions present at the frequency of pyrimidine dimers block replication forks. As a mechanism for this fork blockage, we propose that polymerization of the leading strand makes a significant contribution to the energetics of fork movement, so any lesion in the template for the leading strand which blocks polymerization should also block fork movement.  相似文献   

4.
Perturbations of Simian Virus 40 (SV40) DNA replication by ultraviolet (UV) light during the lytic cycle in permissive monkey CV-1 cells resemble those seen in host cell DNA replication. Formation of Form I DNA molecules (i.e. completion of SV40 DNA synthesis) was more sensitive to UV irradiation than synthesis of replicative intermediates or Form II molecules, consistent with inhibition of DNA chain elongation. The observed amounts of [3H]thymidine incorporated in UV-irradiated molecules could be predicted on the assumption that pyrimidine dimers are responsible for blocking nascent DNA strand growth. The relative proportion of labeled Form I molecules in UV-irradiated cultures rapidly increased to near-control values with incubation after 20 or 40 J/m2 of light (0.9--1.0 or 1.8--2.0 dimers per SV40 genome, respectively). This rapid increase and the failure of Form II molecules to accumulate suggest that SV40 growing forks can rapidly bypass many dimers. Form II molecules formed after UV irradiation were not converted to linear (Form III) molecules by the dimer-specific T4 endonuclease V, suggesting either that there are no gaps opposite dimers in these molecules or that T4 endonuclease V cannot use Form II molecules as substrates.  相似文献   

5.
Irradiation of simian virus 40 (SV40)-infected cells with low fluences of UV light (20 to 60 J/m2, inducing one to three pyrimidine dimers per SV40 genome) causes a dramatic inhibition of viral DNA replication. However, treatment of cells with UV radiation (20 J/m2) before infection with SV40 virus enhances the replication of UV-damaged viral DNA. To investigate the mechanism of this enhancement of replication, we analyzed the kinetics of synthesis and interconversion of viral replicative intermediates synthesized after UV irradiation of SV40-infected cells that had been pretreated with UV radiation. This enhancement did not appear to be due to an expansion of the size of the pool of replicative intermediates after irradiation of pretreated infected cells; the kinetics of incorporation of labeled thymidine into replicative intermediates were very similar after irradiation of infected control and pretreated cells. The major products of replication of SV40 DNA after UV irradiation at the low UV fluences used here were form II molecules with single-stranded gaps (relaxed circular intermediates). There did not appear to be a change in the proportion of these molecules synthesized when cells were pretreated with UV radiation. Thus, it is unlikely that a substantial amount of DNA synthesis occurs past pyrimidine dimers without leaving gaps. This conclusion is supported by the observation that the proportion of newly synthesized SV40 form I molecules that contain pyrimidine dimers was not increased in pretreated cells. Pulse-chase experiments suggested that there is a more efficient conversion of replicative intermediates into form I molecules in pretreated cells. This could be due to more efficient gap filling in relaxed circular intermediate molecules or to the release of blocked replication forks. Alternatively, the enhanced replication observed here may be due to an increase in the excision repair capacity of the pretreated cells.  相似文献   

6.
In vivo-labeled SV40 replicating DNA molecules can be converted into covalently closed superhelical SV40 DNA (SV40(I) using a lysate of sv40-infected monkey cells containing intact nuclei. Replication in vitro occurred at one-third the in vivo rate for 30 min at 30 degrees. After 1 hour of incubation, about 54% of the replicating molecules had been converted to SV40(I), 5% to nicked, circular molecules (SV40(II), 5% to covalently closed dimers; the remainder failed to complete replication although 75% of the prelabeled daughter strands had been elongated to one-genome length. Density labeling in vitro showed that all replicating molecules had participated during DNA synthesis in vitro. Velocity and equilibrium sedimentation analysis of pulse-chased and labeled DNA using radioactive and density labels suggested that SV40 DNA synthesis in vitro was a continuation of normal ongoing DNA synthesis. Initiation of new rounds of SV40 DNA replication was not detectable.  相似文献   

7.
The maturation of replicating simian virus 40 (SV40) chromosomes into superhelical viral DNA monomers [SV40(I) DNA] was analyzed in both intact cells and isolated nuclei to investigate further the role of soluble cytosol factors in subcellular systems. Replicating intermediates [SV40(RI) DNA] were purified to avoid contamination by molecules broken at their replication forks, and the distribution of SV40(RI) DNA as a function of its extent of replication was analyzed by gel electrophoresis and electron microscopy. With virus-infected CV-1 cells, SV40(RI) DNA accumulated only when replication was 85 to 95% completed. These molecules [SV40(RI*) DNA] were two to three times more prevalent than an equivalent sample of early replicating DNA, consistent with a rate-limiting step in the separation of sibling chromosomes. Nuclei isolated from infected cells permitted normal maturation of SV40(RI) DNA into SV40(I) DNA when the preparation was supplemented with cytosol. However, in the absence of cytosol, the extent of DNA synthesis was diminished three- to fivefold (regardless of the addition of ribonucleotide triphosphates), with little change in the rate of synthesis during the first minute; also, the joining of Okazaki fragments to long nascent DNA was inhibited, and SV40(I) DNA was not formed. The fraction of short-nascent DNA chains that may have resulted from dUTP incorporation was insignificant in nuclei with or without cytosol. Pulse-chase experiments revealed that joining, but not initiation, of Okazaki fragments required cytosol. Cessation of DNA synthesis in nuclei without cytosol could be explained by an increased probability for cleavage of replication forks. These broken molecules masqueraded during gel electrophoresis of replicating DNA as a peak of 80% completed SV40(RI) DNA. Failure to convert SV40(RI*) DNA into SV40(I) DNA under these conditions could be explained by the requirement for cytosol to complete the gap-filling step in Okazaki fragment metabolism: circular monomers with their nascent DNA strands interrupted in the termination region [SV40(II*) DNA] accumulated with unjoined Okazaki fragments. Thus, separation of sibling chromosomes still occurred, but gaps remained in the terminal portions of their daughter DNA strands. These and other data support a central role for SV40(RI*) and SV40(II*) DNAs in the completion of viral DNA replication.  相似文献   

8.
M M Seidman  A J Levine  H Weintraub 《Cell》1979,18(2):439-449
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9.
G Prelich  B Stillman 《Cell》1988,53(1):117-126
Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) is a cell cycle and growth regulated protein required for replication of SV40 DNA in vitro. Its function was investigated by comparison of the replication products synthesized in its presence or absence. In the completely reconstituted replication system that contains PCNA, DNA synthesis initiates at the origin and proceeds bidirectionally on both leading and lagging strands around the template DNA to yield duplex, circular daughter molecules. In contrast, in the absence of PCNA, early replicative intermediates containing short nascent strands accumulate. Replication forks continue bidirectionally from the origin, but surprisingly, only lagging strand products are synthesized. Thus two stages of DNA synthesis have been defined, with the second stage requiring PCNA for coordinated leading and lagging strand synthesis at the replication fork. We suggest that during eukaryotic chromosome replication there is a switch to a PCNA-dependent elongation stage that requires two distinct DNA polymerases.  相似文献   

10.
DNA replication in eucaryotic cells involves a variety of proteins which synthesize the leading and lagging strands in an asymmetric coordinated manner. To analyse the effect of this asymmetry on the translesion synthesis of UV-induced lesions, we have incubated SV40 origin-containing plasmids with a unique site-specific cis, syn-cyclobutane dimer or a pyrimidine-pyrimidone (6-4) photoproduct on either the leading or lagging strand template with DNA replication-competent extracts made from human HeLa cells. Two dimensional agarose gel electrophoresis analyses revealed a strong blockage of fork progression only when the UV lesion is located on the leading strand template. Because DNA helicases are responsible for unwinding duplex DNA ahead of the fork and are then the first component to encounter any potential lesion, we tested the effect of these single photoproducts on the unwinding activity of the SV40 T antigen, the major helicase in our in vitro replication assay. We showed that the activity of the SV40 T-antigen helicase is not inhibited by UV-induced DNA lesions in double-stranded DNA substrate.  相似文献   

11.
The DNA-damage checkpoint kinase Chk1 is essential in higher eukaryotes due to its role in maintaining genome stability in proliferating cells. CHK1 gene deletion is embryonically lethal, and Chk1 inhibition in replicating cells causes cell-cycle defects that eventually lead to perturbed replication and replication-fork collapse, thus generating endogenous DNA damage. What is the cause of replication-fork collapse when Chk1 is inactivated, however, remains poorly understood. Here, we show that generation of DNA double-strand breaks at replication forks when Chk1 activity is compromised relies on the DNA endonuclease complex Mus81/Eme1. Importantly, we show that Mus81/Eme1-dependent DNA damage--rather than a global increase in replication-fork stalling--is the cause of incomplete replication in Chk1-deficient cells. Consequently, Mus81/Eme1 depletion alleviates the S-phase progression defects associated with Chk1 deficiency, thereby increasing cell survival. Chk1-mediated protection of replication forks from Mus81/Eme1 even under otherwise unchallenged conditions is therefore vital to prevent uncontrolled fork collapse and ensure proper S-phase progression in human cells.  相似文献   

12.
Electron microscopy (EM) was used to visualize intermediates of in vitro replication of closed circular DNA plasmids. Cell-free extracts were prepared from human cells that are proficient (IDH4, HeLa) or deficient (CTag) in bypass replication of pyrimidine dimers. The DNA substrate was either undamaged or contained a single cis, syn thymine dimer. This lesion was inserted 385 bp downstream from the center of the SV40 origin of replication and sited specifically in the template to the leading strand of the newly synthesized DNA. Products from 30 minute reactions were crosslinked with psoralen and UV, linearized with restriction enzymes and spread for EM visualization. Extended single-stranded DNA regions were detected in damaged molecules replicated by either bypass-proficient or deficient extracts. These regions could be coated with Escherichia coli single-stranded DNA binding protein. The length of duplex DNA from a unique restriction site to the single-stranded DNA region was that predicted from blockage of leading strand synthesis by the site-specific dimer. These results were confirmed by S1nuclease treatment of replication products linearized with single cutting restriction enzymes, followed by detection of the diagnostic fragments by gel electrophoresis. The absence of an extended single-stranded DNA region in replication forks that were clearly beyond the dimer was taken as evidence of bypass replication. These criteria were fulfilled in 17 % of the molecules replicated by the IDH4 extract.  相似文献   

13.
About 50% of the SV40 DNA in the process of replication (sv40(ri) dna) completed replication in lysates of infected BSC-1 cells by conversion to covalently closed, superhelical SV40 DNA (SV40(I) DNA). Fractionation of the lysate into nuclear and cytoplasmic components blocked 99% of the synthesis of SV40(I) DNA in the purified nuclei. The reconstituted system, made by adding back the cytoplasmic fraction before incubation at 30 degrees, completely restored the in vitro level of SV40(I) DNA synthesis. Preliminary characterization of the activity found in the cytoplasmic fraction suggested it was a soluble, heat-labile protein (or proteins) with a minimum molecular weight of about 30,000 and an active sulfhydryl group. The activity was present in both infected and uninfected monkey cells, and at a lower level in mouse, hamster, and human cell lines. Neither serum starvation nor cycloheximide treatment of cells diminished the activity in the cytoplasmic fraction. Purified cytoplasmic DNA polymerase from KB cells did not substitute for the cytoplasmic fraction which was required for elongation of newly synthesized DNA strands. In the absence of the cytoplasmic fraction, conversion of 4 S DNA into longer strands was inhibited, and SV40(RI) DNA appeared to be broken specifically at the replication forks.  相似文献   

14.
The distribution of preformed ("old") histone octamers between the two arms of DNA replication forks was analyzed in simian virus 40(SV40)-infected cells following treatment with cycloheximide to prevent nucleosome assembly from nascent histones. Viral chromatin synthesized in the presence of cycloheximide was shown to be deficient in nucleosomes. Replicating SV40 DNA (wild-type 800 and capsid assembly mutant, tsB11) was radiolabeled in either intact cells or nuclear extracts supplemented with cytosol. Nascent nucleosomal monomers were then released by extensive digestion of isolated nuclei, nuclear extracts or isolated viral chromosomes with micrococcal nuclease. The labeled nucleosomal DNA was purified and found to hybridize to both strands of SV40 DNA restriction fragments taken from each side of the origin of DNA replication, whereas Okazaki fragments hybridized only to the strand representing the retrograde DNA template. In addition, isolated, replicating SV40 chromosomes were digested with two strand-specific exonucleases that excised nascent DNA from either the forward or the retrograde side of replication forks. Pretreatment of cells with cycloheximide did not result in an excess of prenucleosomal DNA on either side of replication forks, but did increase the amount of internucleosomal DNA. These data are consistent with a dispersive model for nucleosome segregation in which "old" histone octamers are distributed to both arms of DNA replication forks.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Simian virus 40 (SV40)-infected CV1 cells transiently exposed to hypoxia show a burst of viral replication immediately after reoxygenation. DNA precursor incorporation and analysis of growing daughter strands by alkaline sedimentation demonstrated that SV40 DNA synthesis began with a lag of about 3 to 5 min after reoxygenation followed by a largely synchronous viral replication round. Viral RNA-DNA primers complementary to the SV40 origin region were not detectable before 3 min upon reoxygenation. A distinct form of circular closed, supercoiled SV40 DNA was detectable as soon as 3 min after reoxygenation but not under hypoxia. Sensitivity to the DNA nuclease Bal 31 and migration behavior in chloroquine-containing agarose gels suggested that this DNA species was highly underwound compared to other SV40 topoisomers and was probably related to the highly underwound form U DNA first described by Dean et al. (F. B. Dean, P. Bullock, Y. Murakami, C. R. Wobbe, L. Weissbach, and J. Hurwitz, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84:16–20, 1987), in vitro. 3′-OH ends of presumed RNA-DNA primers could be detected in form U by 3′ end labeling with T7 polymerase. Addition of aphidicolin to the cells before reoxygenation led to a pronounced accumulation of form U DNA containing RNA-DNA primers. In vivo pulse-chase kinetic studies performed with aphidicolin-treated SV40-infected cells showed that form U is an initial intermediate of SV40 DNA replication which matures into higher-molecular-weight replication intermediates and into SV40 form I DNA after removal of the inhibitor. These results suggest that in vivo initiation of SV40 replication is arrested by hypoxia before origin unwinding and primer synthesis.  相似文献   

17.
Replicating simian virus 40 (SV40) chromosomes were found to be similar to other eukaryotic chromosomes in that the rate and extent of micrococcal nuclease (MNase) digestion were greater with replicating than with nonreplicating mature SV40 chromatin. MNase digestion of replicating SV40 chromosomes, pulse labeled in either intact cells or nuclear extracts, resulted in the rapid release of nascent DNA as essentially bare fragments of duplex DNA (3-7S) that had an average length of 120 base pairs and were degraded during the course of the reaction. In addition, nucleosomal monomers, equivalent in size to those from mature chromosomes, were released. On the other hand, MNase digestion of uniformly labeled mature SV40 chromosomes resulted in the release of only nucleosomal monomers and oligomers. The small nascent DNA fragments released from replicating chromosomes represented prenucleosomal DNA (PN-DNA) from the region of replication forks that encompasses the actual sites of DNA synthesis and includes Okazaki fragments. Predigestion of replicating SV40 chromosomes with both Escherichia coli exonuclease III (3'-5') and bacteriophage T7 gene 6 exonuclease (5'-3') resulted in complete degradation of PN-DNA. This result, together with the observation that isolated PN-DNA annealed equally well to both strands of SV40 restriction fragments, demonstrated that PN-DNA originates from both sides of replication forks. Over 90% of isolated Okazaki fragments annealed only to the retrograde DNA template. The characteristics of isolated PN-DNA were assessed by examining its sensitivity to MNase and single strand specific S1 endonuclease, sedimentation behavior before and after deproteinization, buoyant density in CsCl after formaldehyde treatment, and size on agarose gels. In addition, it was observed that MNase digestion of purified SV40 DNA also resulted in the release of a transient intermediate similar in size to PN-DNA, indicating that a DNA-protein complex is not required to account for the appearance of PN-DNA. These and other data provide a model of replicating chromosomes in which DNA synthesis occurs on a region of replication forks that is free of nucleosomes and is designated as prenucleosomal DNA.  相似文献   

18.
The nature of DNA replication in UV irradiated Syrian hamster embryo cells (HEC) was investigated by measuring the size distribution of nascent daughter strand DNA. During the early mode nascent strands are made in smaller pieces than in nonirradiated cells. The late mode begins when nascent strands recover to normal size. This was observed in HEC 5 h post-UV. When the late mode is operational, nascent strands elongate to parental size in greater than 2 h, whereas less than 3 h are required during early mode function. Evidence from split dose experiments demonstrates that the recovery of the size of nascent strands is not due to enhanced gap filling. Furthermore, pyrimidine dimers are probably recognized differently by the replication complex during early and late mode DNA synthesis. The late mode of replication could account for the ability of HEC to survive UV irradiation even though they are inefficient in both excision and postreplication repair.  相似文献   

19.
Disruption of the nucleosomes at the replication fork.   总被引:16,自引:5,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
C Gruss  J Wu  T Koller    J M Sogo 《The EMBO journal》1993,12(12):4533-4545
The fate of parental nucleosomes during chromatin replication was studied in vitro using in vitro assembled chromatin containing the whole SV40 genome as well as salt-treated and native SV40 minichromosomes. In vitro assembled minichromosomes were able to replicate efficiently in vitro, when the DNA was preincubated with T-antigen, a cytosolic S100 extract and three deoxynucleoside triphosphates prior to chromatin assembly, indicating that the origin has to be free of nucleosomes for replication initiation. The chromatin structure of the newly synthesized daughter strands in replicating molecules was analysed by psoralen cross-linking of the DNA and by micrococcal nuclease digestion. A 5- and 10-fold excess of protein-free competitor DNA present during minichromosome replication traps the segregating histones. In opposition to published data this suggests that the parental histones remain only loosely or not attached to the DNA in the region of the replication fork. Replication in the putative absence of free histones shows that a subnucleosomal particle is randomly assembled on the daughter strands. The data are compatible with the formation of a H3/H4 tetramer complex under these conditions, supporting the notion that under physiological conditions nucleosome core assembly on the newly synthesized daughter strands occurs by the binding of H2A/H2B dimers to a H3/H4 tetramer complex.  相似文献   

20.
Rudolph CJ  Upton AL  Lloyd RG 《DNA Repair》2008,7(9):1589-1602
In dividing cells, the stalling of replication fork complexes by impediments to DNA unwinding or by template imperfections that block synthesis by the polymerase subunits is a serious threat to genomic integrity and cell viability. What happens to stalled forks depends on the nature of the offending obstacle. In UV-irradiated Escherichia coli cells DNA synthesis is delayed for a considerable period, during which forks undergo extensive processing before replication can resume. Thus, restart depends on factors needed to load the replicative helicase, indicating that the replisome may have dissociated. It also requires the RecFOR proteins, which are known to load RecA recombinase on single-stranded DNA, implying that template strands are exposed. To gain a further understanding of how UV irradiation affects replication and how replication resumes after a block, we used fluorescence microscopy and BrdU or radioisotope labelling to examine chromosome replication and cell cycle progression. Our studies confirm that RecFOR promote efficient reactivation of stalled forks and demonstrate that they are also needed for productive replication initiated at the origin, or triggered elsewhere by damage to the DNA. Although delayed, all modes of replication do recover in the absence of these proteins, but nascent DNA strands are degraded more extensively by RecJ exonuclease. However, these strands are also degraded in the presence of RecFOR when restart is blocked by other means, indicating that RecA loading is not sufficient to stabilise and protect the fork. This is consistent with the idea that RecA actively promotes restart. Thus, in contrast to eukaryotic cells, there may be no factor in bacterial cells acting specifically to stabilise stalled forks. Instead, nascent strands may be protected by the simple expedient of promoting restart. We also report that the efficiency of fork reactivation is not affected in polB mutants.  相似文献   

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