首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 500 毫秒
1.
Topoisomerase I (topo I) is needed for efficient initiation of simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA replication and for the formation of completed DNA molecules. Two distinct binding sites for topo I have been previously mapped to the N-terminal (residues 83 to 160) and C-terminal (residues 602 to 708) regions of T antigen. By mutational analysis, we identified a cluster of six residues on the surface of the helicase domain at the C-terminal binding site that are necessary for efficient binding to topo I in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and far-Western blot assays. Mutant T antigens with single substitutions of these residues were unable to participate normally in SV40 DNA replication. Some mutants were completely defective in supporting DNA replication, and replication was not enhanced in the presence of added topo I. The same mutants were the ones that were severely compromised in binding topo I. Other mutants demonstrated intermediate levels of activity in the DNA replication assay and were correspondingly only partially defective in binding topo I. Mutations of nearby residues outside this cluster had no effect on DNA replication or on the ability to bind topo I. These results strongly indicate that the association of topo I with these six residues in T antigen is essential for DNA replication. These residues are located on the back edges of the T-antigen double hexamer. We propose that topo I binds to one site on each hexamer to permit the initiation of SV40 DNA replication.  相似文献   

2.
A K Arthur  A Hss    E Fanning 《Journal of virology》1988,62(6):1999-2006
The genomic coding sequence of the large T antigen of simian virus 40 (SV40) was cloned into an Escherichia coli expression vector by joining new restriction sites, BglII and BamHI, introduced at the intron boundaries of the gene. Full-length large T antigen, as well as deletion and amino acid substitution mutants, were inducibly expressed from the lac promoter of pUC9, albeit with different efficiencies and protein stabilities. Specific interaction with SV40 origin DNA was detected for full-length T antigen and certain mutants. Deletion mutants lacking T-antigen residues 1 to 130 and 260 to 708 retained specific origin-binding activity, demonstrating that the region between residues 131 and 259 must carry the essential binding domain for DNA-binding sites I and II. A sequence between residues 302 and 320 homologous to a metal-binding "finger" motif is therefore not required for origin-specific binding. However, substitution of serine for either of two cysteine residues in this motif caused a dramatic decrease in origin DNA-binding activity. This region, as well as other regions of the full-length protein, may thus be involved in stabilizing the DNA-binding domain and altering its preference for binding to site I or site II DNA.  相似文献   

3.
Wu C  Roy R  Simmons DT 《Journal of virology》2001,75(6):2839-2847
We have previously mapped the single-stranded DNA binding domain of large T antigen to amino acid residues 259 to 627. By using internal deletion mutants, we show that this domain most likely begins after residue 301 and that the region between residues 501 and 550 is not required. To study the function of this binding activity, a series of single-point substitutions were introduced in this domain, and the mutants were tested for their ability to support simian virus 40 (SV40) replication and to bind to single-stranded DNA. Two replication-defective mutants (429DA and 460EA) were grossly impaired in single-stranded DNA binding. These two mutants were further tested for other biochemical activities needed for viral DNA replication. They bound to origin DNA and formed double hexamers in the presence of ATP. Their ability to unwind origin DNA and a helicase substrate was severely reduced, although they still had ATPase activity. These results suggest that the single-stranded DNA binding activity is involved in DNA unwinding. The two mutants were also very defective in structural distortion of origin DNA, making it likely that single-stranded DNA binding is also required for this process. These data show that single-stranded DNA binding is needed for at least two steps during SV40 DNA replication.  相似文献   

4.
Simian virus 40 origin DNA-binding domain on large T antigen.   总被引:37,自引:29,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
Fifty variant forms of simian virus 40 (SV40) large T antigen bearing point, multiple point, deletion, or termination mutations within a region of the protein thought to be involved in DNA binding were tested for their ability to bind to SV40 origin DNA. A number of the mutant large T species including some with point mutations were unable to bind, whereas many were wild type in this activity. The clustering of the mutations that are defective in origin DNA binding both reported here and by others suggests a DNA-binding domain on large T maps between residues 139 and approximately 220, with a particularly sensitive sequence between amino acids 147 and 166. The results indicate that the domain is involved in binding to both site I and site II on SV40 DNA, but it remains unclear whether it is responsible for binding to cellular DNA. Since all the mutants retain the ability to transform Rat-1 cells, we conclude that the ability of large T to bind to SV40 origin DNA is not a prerequisite for its transforming activity.  相似文献   

5.
Gai D  Roy R  Wu C  Simmons DT 《Journal of virology》2000,74(11):5224-5232
Topoisomerase I (topo I) is required for releasing torsional stress during simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA replication. Recently, it has been demonstrated that topo I participates in initiation of replication as well as in elongation. Although T antigen and topo I can bind to one another in vitro, there is no direct evidence that topo I is a component of the replication initiation complex. We demonstrate in this report that topo I associates with T-antigen double hexamers bound to SV40 origin DNA (T(DH)) but not to single hexamers. This association has the same nucleotide and DNA requirements as those for the formation of double hexamers on DNA. Interestingly, topo I prefers to bind to fully formed T(DH) complexes over other oligomerized forms of T antigen associated with the origin. High ratios of topo I to origin DNA destabilize T(DH). The partial unwinding of a small-circular-DNA substrate is dependent on the presence of both T antigen and topo I but is inhibited at high topo I concentrations. Competition experiments with a topo I-binding fragment of T antigen indicate that an interaction between T antigen and topo I occurs during the unwinding reaction. We propose that topo I is recruited to the initiation complex after the assembly of T(DH) and before unwinding to facilitate DNA replication.  相似文献   

6.
To better define protein-DNA interactions at a eukaryotic origin, the domain of simian virus 40 (SV40) large T antigen that specifically interacts with the SV40 origin has been purified and its binding to DNA has been characterized. Evidence is presented that the affinity of the purified T antigen DNA-binding domain for the SV40 origin is comparable to that of the full-length T antigen. Furthermore, stable binding of the T antigen DNA-binding domain to the SV40 origin requires pairs of pentanucleotide recognition sites separated by approximately one turn of a DNA double helix and positioned in a head-to-head orientation. Although two pairs of pentanucleotides are present in the SV40 origin, footprinting and band shift experiments indicate that binding is limited to dimer formation on a single pair of pentanucleotides. Finally, it is demonstrated that the T antigen DNA-binding domain interacts poorly with single-stranded DNA.  相似文献   

7.
Khopde S  Roy R  Simmons DT 《Biochemistry》2008,47(36):9653-9660
Topoisomerase I (topo I) is required for the proper initiation of simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA replication. This enzyme binds to SV40 large T antigen at two places, close to the N-terminal end and near the C-terminal end of the helicase domain. We have recently demonstrated that the binding of topo I to the C-terminal site is necessary for the stimulation of DNA synthesis by topo I and for the formation of normal amounts of completed daughter molecules. In this study, we investigated the mechanism by which this stimulation occurs. Contrary to our expectation that the binding of topo I to this region of T antigen provides the proper unwound DNA substrate for initiation to occur, we demonstrate that binding of topo I stimulates polymerase alpha/primase (pol/prim) to synthesize larger amounts of primers consisting of short RNA and about 30 nucleotides of DNA. Topo I binding also stimulates the production of large molecular weight DNA by pol/prim. Mutant T antigens that fail to bind topo I normally do not participate in the synthesis of expected amounts of primers or large molecular weight DNAs indicating that the association of topo I with the C-terminal binding site on T antigen is required for these activities. It is also shown that topo I has the ability to bind to human RPA directly, suggesting that the stimulation of pol/prim activity may be mediated in part through RPA in the DNA synthesis initiation complex.  相似文献   

8.
We have constructed a series of deletion mutants in the lysozyme promoter region fused to the SV40 T-antigen coding region. Regulated expression was tested after microinjection of the lysozyme deletion mutants into primary cultures of chicken oviduct cells using fluorescent antibodies against T antigen. Deletion of lysozyme gene sequences upstream of position - 164 was accompanied by loss of both progesterone- and glucocorticoid-induced expression. Using the rat liver glucocorticoid receptor for binding studies, two separate binding sites have been identified: a strong binding site that is destroyed by deletion of lysozyme sequences between positions -74 and -39 and a weaker binding site contained between positions -208 and -161 upstream of the lysozyme cap site.  相似文献   

9.
By using a DNA fragment immunoassay, the binding of simian virus 40 (SV40) and polyomavirus (Py) large tumor (T) antigens to regulatory regions at both viral origins of replication was examined. Although both Py T antigen and SV40 T antigen bind to multiple discrete regions on their proper origins and the reciprocal origin, several striking differences were observed. Py T antigen bound efficiently to three regions on Py DNA centered around an MboII site at nucleotide 45 (region A), a BglI site at nucleotide 92 (region B), and another MboII site at nucleotide 132 (region C). Region A is adjacent to the viral replication origin, and region C coincides with the major early mRNA cap site. Weak binding by Py T antigen to the origin palindrome centered at nucleotide 3 also was observed. SV40 T antigen binds strongly to Py regions A and B but only weakly to region C. This weak binding on region C was surprising because this region contains four tandem repeats of GPuGGC, the canonical pentanucleotide sequence thought to be involved in specific binding by T antigens. On SV40 DNA, SV40 T antigen displayed its characteristic hierarchy of affinities, binding most efficiently to site 1 and less efficiently to site 2. Binding to site 3 was undetectable under these conditions. In contrast, Py T antigen, despite an overall relative reduction of affinity for SV40 DNA, binds equally to fragments containing each of the three SV40 binding sites. Py T antigen, but not SV40 T antigen, also bound specifically to a region of human Alu DNA which bears a remarkable homology to SV40 site 1. However, both tumor antigens fail to precipitate DNA from the same region which has two direct repeats of GAGGC. These results indicate that despite similarities in protein structure and DNA sequence, requirements of the two T antigens for pentanucleotide configuration and neighboring sequence environment are different.  相似文献   

10.
Five distinct cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) recognition sites were identified in the simian virus 40 (SV40) T antigen by using H-2b cells that express the truncated T antigen or antigens carrying internal deletions of various sizes. Four of the CTL recognition determinants, designated sites I, II, III, and V, are H-2Db restricted, while site IV is H-2Kb restricted. The boundaries of CTL recognition sites I, II, and III, clustered in the amino-terminal half of the T antigen, were further defined by use of overlapping synthetic peptides containing amino acid sequences previously determined to be required for recognition by T-antigen site-specific CTL clones by using SV40 deletion mutants. CTL clone Y-1, which recognizes epitope I and whose reactivity is affected by deletion of residues 193 to 211 of the T antigen, responded positively to B6/PY cells preincubated with a synthetic peptide corresponding to T-antigen amino acids 205 to 219. CTL clones Y-2 and Y-3 lysed B6/PY cells preincubated with large-T peptide LT220-233. To distinguish further between epitopes II and III, Y-2 and Y-3 CTL clones were reacted with SV40-transformed cells bearing mutations in the major histocompatibility complex class I antigen. Y-2 CTL clones lysed SV40-transformed H-2Dbm13 cells (bm13SV) which carry several amino acid substitutions in the putative antigen-binding site in the alpha 2 domain of the H-2Db antigen but not bm14SV cells, which contain a single amino acid substitution in the alpha 1 domain. Y-3 CTL clones lysed both mutant transformants. Y-1 and Y-5 CTL clones failed to lyse bm13SV and bm14SV cells; however, these cells could present synthetic peptide LT205-219 to CTL clone Y-1 and peptide SV26(489-503) to CTL clone Y-5, suggesting that the endogenously processed T antigen yields fragments of sizes or sequences different from those of synthetic peptides LT205-219 and SV26(489-503).  相似文献   

11.
We have analyzed T antigens produced by a set of simian virus 40 (SV40) A gene deletion mutants for ATPase activity and for binding to the SV40 origin of DNA replication. Virus stocks of nonviable SV40 A gene deletion mutants were established in SV40-transformed monkey COS cells. Mutant T antigens were produced in mutant virus-infected CV1 cells. The structures of the mutant T antigens were characterized by immunoprecipitation with monoclonal antibodies directed against distinct regions of the T-antigen molecule. T antigens in crude extracts prepared from cells infected with 10 different mutants were immobilized on polyacrylamide beads with monoclonal antibodies, quantified by Coomassie blue staining, and then assayed directly for T antigen-specific ATPase activity and for binding to the SV40 origin of DNA replication. Our results indicate that the T antigen coding sequences required for origin binding map between 0.54 and 0.35 map units on the SV40 genome. In contrast, sequences closer to the C terminus of T antigen (between 0.24 and 0.20 map units) are required for ATPase activity. The presence of the ATPase activity correlated closely with the ability of the mutant viruses to replicate and to transform nonpermissive cells. The origin binding activity was retained, however, by three mutants that lacked these two functions, indicating that this activity is not sufficient to support either cellular transformation or viral replication. Neither the ATPase activity nor the origin binding activity correlated with the ability of the mutant DNA to activate silent rRNA genes or host cell DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

12.
Assembly of the replication initiation complex on SV40 origin DNA   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The assembly of the complex that forms over the simian virus 40 origin to initiate DNA replication is not well understood. This complex is composed of the virus-coded T antigen and three cellular proteins, replication protein A (RPA), DNA polymerase α/primase (pol/prim) and topoisomerase I (topo I) in association with the origin. The order in which these various proteins bind to the DNA was investigated by performing binding assays using biotinylated origin DNA. We demonstrate that in the presence of all four proteins, pol/prim was essential to stabilize the initiation complex from the disruptive effects of topo I. At the optimal concentration of pol/prim, topo I and RPA bound efficiently to the complex, although pol/prim itself was not detected in significant amounts. At higher concentrations less topo I was recruited, suggesting that DNA polymerase is an important modulator of the binding of topo I. Topo I, in turn, appeared to be involved in recruiting RPA. RPA, in contrast, seemed to have little or no effect on the recruitment of the other proteins to the origin. These and other data suggested that pol/prim is the first cellular protein to interact with the double-hexameric T antigen bound to the origin. This is likely followed by topo I and then RPA, or perhaps by a complex of topo I and RPA. Stoichiometric analysis of the topo I and T antigen present in the complex suggested that two molecules of topo I are recruited per double hexamer. Finally, we demonstrate that DNA has a role in recruiting topo I to the origin.  相似文献   

13.
An expression vector utilizing the enhancer and promoter region of the simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA regulating a murine p53 cDNA clone was constructed. The vector produced murine p53 protein in monkey cells identified by five different monoclonal antibodies, three of which were specific for the murine form of p53. The murine p53 produced in monkey cells formed an oligomeric protein complex with the SV40 large tumor antigen. A large number of deletion mutations, in-frame linker insertion mutations, and linker insertion mutations resulting in a frameshift mutation were constructed in the cDNA coding portion of the p53 protein expression vector. The wild-type and mutant p53 cDNA vectors were expressed in monkey cells producing the SV40 large T antigen. The conformation and levels of p53 protein and its ability to form protein complexes with the SV40 T antigen were determined by using five different monoclonal antibodies with quite distinct epitope recognition sites. Insertion mutations between amino acid residues 123 and 215 (of a total of 390 amino acids) eliminated the ability of murine p53 to bind to the SV40 large T antigen. Deletion (at amino acids 11 through 33) and insertion mutations (amino acids 222 through 344) located on either side of this T-antigen-binding protein domain produced a murine p53 protein that bound to the SV40 large T antigen. The same five insertion mutations that failed to bind with the SV40 large T antigen also failed to react with a specific monoclonal antibody, PAb246. In contrast, six additional deletion and insertion mutations that produced p53 protein that did bind with T antigen were each recognized by PAb246. The proposed epitope for PAb246 has been mapped adjacent (amino acids 88 through 109) to the T-antigen-binding domain (amino acids 123 through 215) localized by the mutations mapped in this study. Finally, some insertion mutations that produced a protein that failed to bind to the SV40 T antigen appeared to have an enhanced ability to complex with a 68-kilodalton cellular protein in monkey cells.  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
S P Deb  S Deb 《Journal of virology》1989,63(7):2901-2907
The sequence components that direct high-affinity binding of simian virus 40 (SV40) T antigen to SV40 origin region I are composed of two recognition pentanucleotides separated by a spacer. This region has binding sites for two T-antigen monomeric units. We extended the tripartite region I sequence by one and two sets of spacers and pentanucleotides and also shortened the region by one pentanucleotide. Our T-antigen-binding studies with these constructs show that the protein has a strong preference for binding to an even rather than an odd number of pentanucleotides separated by spacer sequences. Gel retardation assays reveal that the size of the complex formed between the 17-base-pair region I sequence and T antigen did not increase when the sequence was extended with one spacer-pentanucleotide sequence but did increase with two such units. DNase I footprinting and fragment assay experiments indicate that the protein did not protect a pentanucleotide that was not paired with another pentanucleotide. The unpaired pentanucleotide resumed its binding activity when it was paired with a spacer and another pentanucleotide sequence. We propose that T antigen binds to region I as a preformed dimer.  相似文献   

17.
18.
When human topoisomerase I binds DNA, two opposing lobes in the enzyme, the cap region (amino acid, residues 175-433) and the catalytic domain (Deltacap, residues 433 to the COOH terminus) clamp tightly around the DNA helix to form the precleavage complex. Although Deltacap contains all of the residues known to be important for catalysis and binds DNA with an affinity similar to that of the intact enzyme, this fragment lacks catalytic activity. However, a mixture of Deltacap and topo31 (residues 175-433) reconstitutes enzymatic activity as measured by plasmid DNA relaxation and suicide cleavage assays. Although the formation of an active complex between topo31 and Deltacap is too unstable to be detected by pull-down experiments even in the presence of DNA, the association of topo31 with Deltacap persists and is detectable after the complex catalyzes the covalent attachment of the DNA to Deltacap by suicide cleavage. Removal of topo31 from Deltacap-DNA after suicide cleavage reveals that, unlike the cleavage reaction, religation does not require the cap region of the protein. These results suggest that activation of the catalytic domain of the enzyme for cleavage requires both DNA binding and the presence of the cap region of the protein.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Eukaryotic DNA topoisomerase I introduces transient single-stranded breaks on double-stranded DNA and spontaneously breaks down single-stranded DNA. The cleavage sites on both single and double-stranded SV40 DNA have been determined by DNA sequencing. Consistent with other reports, the eukaryotic enzymes, in contrast to prokaryotic type I topoisomerases, links to the 3'-end of the cleaved DNA and generates a free 5'-hydroxyl end on the other half of the broken DNA strand. Both human and calf enzymes cleave SV40 DNA at the identical and specific sites. From 827 nucleotides sequenced, 68 cleavage sites were mapped. The majority of the cleavage sites were present on both double and single-stranded DNA at exactly the same nucleotide positions, suggesting that the DNA sequence is essential for enzyme recognition. By analyzing all the cleavage sequences, certain nucleotides are found to be less favored at the cleavage sites. There is a high probability to exclude G from positions -4, -2, -1 and +1, T from position -3, and A from position -1. These five positions (-4 to +1 oriented in the 5' to 3' direction) around the cleavage sites must interact intimately with topo I and thus are essential for enzyme recognition. One topo I cleavage site which shows atypical cleavage sequence maps in the middle of a palindromic sequence near the origin of SV40 DNA replication. It occurs only on single-stranded SV40 DNA, suggesting that the DNA hairpin can alter the cleavage specificity. The strongest cleavage site maps near the origin of SV40 DNA replication at nucleotide 31-32 and has a pentanucleotide sequence of 5'-TGACT-3'.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号