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1.
Temperature-sensitive mutants of herpes simplex virus type 1 representing eight DNA-negative complementation groups were grouped into the following three categories based on the viral DNA synthesis patterns after shift-up from the permissive to the nonpermissive temperature and after shift-down from the nonpermissive to the permissive temperature in the presence and absence of inhibitors of RNA and protein synthesis. (i) Viral DNA synthesis was inhibited after shift-up in cells infected with tsB, tsH, and tsJ. After shift-down, tsB- and tsH-infected cells synthesized viral DNA in the absence of de novo RNA and protein synthesis whereas tsJ-infected cells synthesized no viral DNA in the absence of protein synthesis. The B, H, and J proteins appear to be continuously required for the synthesis of viral DNA. (ii) Viral DNA synthesis continued after shift-up in cells infected with tsD and tsK whereas no viral DNA was synthesized after shift-down in the absence of RNA and protein synthesis. Mutants tsD and tsK appear to be defective in early regulatory functions. (iii) Cells infected with tsL, tsS, and tsU synthesized viral DNA after shift-up and after shift-down in the absence of RNA and protein synthesis. The functions of the L, S, and U proteins cannot yet be determined.  相似文献   

2.
Specific Sindbis virus-coded function for minus-strand RNA synthesis.   总被引:31,自引:26,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
The synthesis of minus-strand RNA was studied in cell cultures infected with the heat-resistant strain of Sindbis virus and with temperature-sensitive (ts) belonging to complementation groups A, B, F, and G, all of which exhibited an RNA-negative (RNA-) phenotype when infection was initiated and maintained at 39 degrees C, the nonpermissive temperature. When infected cultures were shifted from 28 degrees C (the permissive temperature) to 39 degrees C at 3 h postinfection, the synthesis of viral minus-strand RNA ceased in cultures infected with ts mutants of complementation groups B and F, but continued in cultures infected with the parental virus and mutans of complementation groups A and G. In cultures infected with ts11 of complementation group B, the synthesis of viral minus-strand RNA ceased, whereas the synthesis of 42S and 26S plus-strand RNAs continued for at least 5 h after the shift to 39 degrees C. However, when ts11-infected cultures were returned to 28 degrees C 1 h after the shift to 39 degrees C, the synthesis of viral minus-strand RNA resumed, and the rate of viral RNA synthesis increased. The recovery of minus-strand synthesis translation of new proteins. We conclude that at least one viral function is required for alphavirus minus-strand synthesis that is not required for plus-strand synthesis. In cultures infected with ts6 of complementation group F, the syntheses of both viral plus-strand and minus-strand RNAs were drastically reduced after the shift to 39 degrees C. Since ts6 failed to synthesize both plus-strand and minus-strand RNAs after the shift to 39 degrees C, at least one common viral component appears to be required for the synthesis of both minus-strand and plus-strand RNAs.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Eight temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants that replicate normally at 32 C but poorly, if at all, at 39.5 C have been isolated from mutagenized stocks of a wild-type strain of type 5 adenovirus. Three mutagens were employed: nitrous acid, hydroxylamine, and nitrosoguanidine. Ts mutants were isolated from mutagenized viral stocks with frequencies between 0.01 and 0.1%. All eight mutants had reversion frequencies of 10(-5) or less. Complementation experiments in doubly infected cultures at the nonpermissive temperature separated the mutants into three nonoverlapping complementation groups. Complementation yields ranged from a 2.3- to a 3,000-fold increase over the sums of the yields from the two singly infected controls. Genetic recombination was also demonstrated; approximate recombination frequencies ranged from 0.1 to 15%. Preliminary biochemical and immunological characterization of the mutants indicated that: (i) the single mutant in complementation group I did not replicate its deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) or synthesize late proteins at the nonpermissive temperature but did inhibit host DNA synthesis to 25% of an uninfected control; (ii) the four group II mutants replicated viral DNA, shut off host DNA synthesis, synthesized penton base and fiber, but did not synthesize immunologically detectable hexon; the three mutants in complementation group III synthesized viral DNA, shut off host DNA synthesis, and made immunologically reactive capsid proteins (hexon, penton base, and fiber).  相似文献   

5.
Fourteen temperature-sensitive mutants of human adenovirus type2, which differed in their plaquing efficiencies at at the permissive and nonpermissive temperatures by 4 to 5 orders of magnitude, were isolated. These mutants, which could be assigned to seven complementation groups, were tested for their capacity to synthesize adenovirus DNA at the nonpermissive temperature. Three mutants in three different complementation groups proved deficient in viral DNA synthesis. The DNA-negative mutant H2ts206 complemented the DNA-negative mutants H5ts36 and H5ts125, whereas mutant H2ts201 complemented H5ts36 only. Among the DNA-negative mutants, H2ts206 synthesized the smallest amount of viral DNA at the nonpermissive temperature (39.5 C). Data obtained in temperature shift experiments indicated that a very early function was involved in temperature sensitivity. In keeping with this observation, early virus-specific mRNA was not detected in cells infected with H2ts206 and maintained at 39.5 C. Prolonged (52 h) incubation of cells infected with H2ts206 at the nonpermissive temperature led to the synthesis of a high-molecular-weight form of viral DNA.  相似文献   

6.
The maturation of pseudorabies virus DNA from the replicative concatemeric form to molecules of genome length was examined using nine DNA+ temperature-sensitive mutants of pseudorabies virus, each belonging to a different complementation group. At the nonpermissive temperature, cells infected with each of the mutants synthesized concatemeric DNA. Cleavage of the concatemeric DNA to genome-length viral DNA was defective in all the DNA+ ts mutants tested, indicating that several viral gene products are involved in the DNA maturation process. In none of the ts mutant-infected cells were capsids with electron-dense cores (containing DNA) formed. Empty capsids with electron-translucent cores were, however, formed in cells infected with six of the nine temperature-sensitive mutants; in cells infected with three of the mutants, no capsid assembly occurred. Because these three mutants are deficient both in maturation of DNA and in the assembly of viral capsids, we conclude that maturation of viral DNA is dependent upon the assembly of capsids. In cells infected with two of the mutants (tsN and tsIE13), normal maturation of viral DNA occurred after shiftdown of the cells to the permissive temperature in the presence of cycloheximide, indicating that the temperature-sensitive proteins involved in DNA maturation became functional after shiftdown. Furthermore, because cycloheximide reduces maturation of DNA in wild-type-infected cells but not in cells infected with these two mutants, we conclude that a protein(s) necessary for the maturation of concatemeric DNA, which is present in limiting amounts during the normal course of infection, accumulated in the mutant-infected cells at the nonpermissive temperature. Concomitant with cleavage of concatemeric DNA, full capsids with electron-dense cores appeared after shiftdown of tsN-infected cells to the permissive temperature, indicating that there may be a correlation between maturation of DNA and formation of full capsids. The number of empty and full capsids (containing electron-dense cores) present in tsN-infected cells incubated at the nonpermissive temperature, as well as after shiftdown to the permissive temperature in the presence of cycloheximide, was determined by electron microscopy and by sedimentation analysis in sucrose gradients. After shiftdown to the permissive temperature in the presence of cycloheximide, the number of empty capsids present in tsN-infected cells decreased with a concomitant accumulation of full capsids, indicating that empty capsids are precursors to full capsids.  相似文献   

7.
Temperature-sensitive mutants of simian virus 40 (SV40) have been classified as those that are blocked prior to viral DNA synthesis at the restrictive temperature, "early" mutants, and those harboring a defect later in the replication cycle, "late" mutants. Mutants of the A and D complementation groups are early, those of the B, C, and BC groups are late. Our results confirm earlier reports that A mutants are defective in a function required for the initiation of each round of viral DNA synthesis. D mutants, on the other hand, continue viral DNA replication at the restrictive temperature after preincubation at the permissive temperature. The length of time required for D function to be expressed at the permissive temperature-after which infection proceeds unabated on shifting of the cultures to the restrictive temperature-is 10 to 20 h. The viral DNA synthesized in D mutants under these conditions progresses in normal fashion through replicative intermediate molecules to mature component I and II DNA molecules.  相似文献   

8.
Different temperature-sensitive mutants of vesicular stomatitis virus have been characterized in terms of their ability to induce synthesis of viral ribonucleic acid (RNA) in BHK-21 cells at 39 C (the restrictive temperature for these mutants). Mutants belonging to complementation groups I and IV (and probably II) did not induce actinomycin-resistant RNA synthesis in infected cells incubated at 39 C. All three mutants comprising complementation group III induced viral RNA synthesis at 39 C. The temperature sensitivity of the defective viral functions has also been studied by temperature-shift experiments. The functions associated with the mutants of groups I, II, and IV were required early, whereas the function associated with the group III mutants was not required until a late stage of the viral cycle. The heat sensitivity of extracellular virion was not correlated with complementation group.  相似文献   

9.
A temperature-sensitive simian virus 40 (SV40) mutant, tsTNG-1, has been isolated from nitrosoguanidine-treated and SV40-infected African green monkey kidney (CV-1) cultures. Replication of virus at the nonpermissive temperature (38.7 C) was 3,000-fold less than at the permissive temperature (33.5 C). Plaque formation by SV40tsTNG-1 deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) on CV-1 monolayers occurred normally at 33.5 C but was grossly inhibited at 38.7 C. The time at which virus replication was blocked at 38.7 C was determined by temperature-shift experiments. In shift-up experiments, cultures infected for various times at 33.5 C were shifted to 38.7 C. In shift-down experiments, cultures infected for various times at 38.7 C were shifted to 33.5 C. All cultures were harvested at 96 hr postinfection (PI). No virus growth occurred when the shift-up occurred before 40 hr PI. Maximum virus yields were obtained at 96 hr PI when the shift-down occurred at 66 hr, but only about 15% of the maximum yield was obtained when the shift-down occurred at 76 hr PI. These results indicate that SV40tsTNG-1 contains a conditional lethal mutation in a late viral gene function. Mutant SV40tsTNG-1 synthesized T antigen, viral capsid antigens, and viral DNA, and induced thymidine kinase activity at either 33.5 or 38.7 C. The properties of the SV40 DNA synthesized in mutant-infected CV-1 cells at 33.5 or 38.7 C were very similar to those of SV40 DNA made in parental virus-infected cells, as determined by nitrocellulose column chromatography, cesium-chloride-ethidium bromide equilibrium centrifugation, and by velocity centrifugation in neutral sucrose gradients. Mutant SV40tsTNG-1 enhanced cellular DNA synthesis in primary cultures of mouse kidney cells at 33.5 and 38.7 C and also transformed mouse kidney cultures at 36.5 C. SV40tsTNG-1 was recovered from clonal lines of transformed cells after fusion with susceptible CV-1 cells and incubation of heterokaryons at 33.5 C, but not at 38.7 C.  相似文献   

10.
Ishii K  Moss B 《Journal of virology》2001,75(4):1656-1663
Previous analyses of randomly generated, temperature-sensitive vaccinia virus mutants led to the mapping of DNA synthesis negative complementation groups to the B1R, D4R, D5R, and E9L genes. Evidence from the yeast two-hybrid system that the D4R and D5R proteins can interact with the A20R protein suggested that A20R was also involved in DNA replication. We found that the A20R gene was transcribed early after infection, consistent with such a role. To investigate the function of the A20R protein, targeted mutations were made by substituting alanines for charged amino acids occurring in 11 different clusters. Four mutants were not isolated, suggesting that they were lethal, two mutants exhibited no temperature sensitivity, two mutants exhibited partial temperature sensitivity, and two mutants formed no plaques or infectious virus at 39 degrees C. The two mutants with stringent phenotypes were further characterized. Temperature shift-up experiments indicated that the crucial period was between 6 and 12 h after infection, making it unlikely that the defect was in virus entry, early gene expression, or a late stage of virus assembly. Similar patterns of metabolically labeled viral early proteins were detected at permissive and nonpermissive temperatures, but one mutant showed an absence of late proteins under the latter conditions. Moreover, no viral DNA synthesis was detected when cells were infected with either stringent mutant at 39 degrees C. The previous yeast two-hybrid analysis together with the present characterization of A20R temperature-sensitive mutants suggested that the A20R, D4R, and D5R proteins are components of a multiprotein DNA replication complex.  相似文献   

11.
Ten temperature-sensitive mutants of simian virus 40 have been isolated and characterized in permissive cells. The mutants could be divided into three functional groups and two complementation groups. Seven mutants produced T antigen, infectious viral deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), and structural viral antigen but predominantly the empty shell type of viral particles. Two mutants produced T antigen and infectious viral DNA, but, although viral structural protein(s) could be detected immunologically, no V antigen or viral particles were found. These two functional groups of mutants did not complement each other. A single mutant was defective in the synthesis of viral DNA, viral structural antigens, and viral particles. T antigen could be detected in infected cells by fluorescent antibody but was reduced by complement fixation assay. This mutant stimulated cell DNA synthesis at the restrictive temperature and complemented the other two functional groups of mutants.  相似文献   

12.
Ten temperature-sensitive mutants of Sendai virus, a paramyxovirus, were isolated and partially characterized. The mutants replicated in chicken embryo lung cells at 30 C, but not at 38 C; wild-type virus grew equally well at both temperatures. Complementation tests divided the mutants into seven groups. Six groups synthesized neither infectious virus nor RNA when incubated at 38 C from the beginning of infection. Temperature shift-up experiments demonstrated that three of these complementation groups were blocked in early steps required for RNA synthesis, but these gene functions were not needed throughout the replicative cycle. In contrast, the other three RNA-negative complementation groups were defective throughout the replicative cycle in functions required for virus-specific RNA synthesis. Only one mutant, which complemented all of the above, synthesized RNA but not infectious virus when placed at 38 C; the hemagglutinin of this mutant functioned only at the permissive temperature.  相似文献   

13.
A large number of mutants that are temperature sensitive (ts) for growth have been isolated from mouse mammary carcinoma FM3A cells by an improved selection method consisting of cell synchronization and short exposures to restrictive temperature. The improved method increased the efficiency of isolating DNA ts mutants, which showed a rapid decrease in DNA-synthesizing ability after temperature shift-up. Sixteen mutants isolated by this and other methods were selected for this study. Flow microfluorometric analysis of these mutants cultured at a nonpermissive temperature (39 degrees C) for 16 h indicated that five clones were arrested in the G1 to S phase of the cell cycle, six clones were in the S to G2 phase, and two clones were arrested in the G2 phase. The remaining three clones exhibited 8C DNA content after incubation at 39 degrees C for 28 h, indicating defects in mitosis or cytokinesis. These mutants were classified into 11 complementation groups. All the mutants except for those arrested in the G2 phase and those exhibiting defects in mitosis or cytokinesis showed a rapid decrease in DNA synthesis after temperature shift-up without a decrease in RNA and protein synthesis. The polyomavirus DNA cell-free replication system, which consists of polyomavirus large tumor antigen and mouse cell extracts, was used for further characterization of these DNA ts mutants. Among these ts mutants, only the tsFT20 strain, which contains heat-labile DNA polymerase alpha, was unable to support the polyomavirus DNA replication. Analysis by DNA fiber autoradiography revealed that DNA chain elongation rates of these DNA ts mutants were not changed and that the initiation of DNA replication at the origin of replicons was impaired in the mutant cells.  相似文献   

14.
BHK-21 cells infected with temperature-sensitive mutants of herpes simplex virus type 1 strain KOS representing 16 complementation groups were tested for susceptibility to complement-mediated immune cytolysis at permissive (34 degrees C) and nonpermissive (39 degrees C) temperatures. Only cells infected by mutants in complementation group E were resistant to immune cytolysis in a temperature-sensitive manner compared with wild-type infections. The expression of group E mutant cell surface antigens during infections at 34 and 39 degrees C was characterized by a combination of cell surface radioiodination, specific immunoprecipitation, and gel electrophoretic analysis of immunoprecipitates. Resistance to immune lysis at 39 degrees C correlated with the absence of viral antigens exposed at the cell surface. Intrinsic radiolabeling of group E mutant infections with [14C]glucosamine revealed that normal glycoproteins were produced at 34 degrees C but none were synthesized at 39 degrees C. The effect of 2-deoxy-D-glucose on glycosylation of group E mutants at 39 degrees C suggested that the viral glycoprotein precursors were not synthesized. The complementation group E mutants failed to complement herpes simplex virus type 1 mutants isolated by other workers. These included the group B mutants of strain KOS, the temperature-sensitive group D mutants of strain 17, and the LB2 mutant of strain HFEM. These mutants should be considered members of herpes simplex virus type 1 complementation group 1.2, in keeping with the new herpes simplex virus type 1 nomenclature.  相似文献   

15.
Nine temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of herpes simplex virus type 1 selected for their inability to render cells susceptible to immune cytolysis after infection at the nonpermissive temperature have been characterized genetically and phenotypically. The mutations in four mutants were mapped physically by marker rescue and assigned to functional groups by complementation analysis. In an effort to determine the molecular basis for cytolysis resistance, cells infected with each of the nine mutants were monitored for the synthesis of viral glycoprotein in total cell extracts and for the presence of these glycoproteins in plasma membranes. The four mutants whose ts mutations were mapped were selected with polypeptide-specific antiserum to glycoproteins gA and gB; however, three of the four mutations mapped to DNA sequences outside the limits of the structural gene specifying these glycoproteins. Combined complementation and phenotypic analysis indicates that the fourth mutation also lies elsewhere. The ts mutations in five additional cytolysis-resistant mutants could not be rescued with single cloned DNA fragments representing the entire herpes simplex virus type 1 genome, suggesting that these mutants may possess multiple mutations. Complementation tests with the four mutants whose ts lesions had been mapped physically demonstrated that each represents a new viral gene. Examination of mutant-infected cells at the nonpermissive temperature for the presence of viral glycoproteins in total cell extracts and in membranes at the cell surface demonstrated that (i) none of the five major viral glycoproteins was detected in extracts of cells infected with one mutant, suggesting that this mutant is defective in a very early function; (ii) cells infected with six of the nine mutants exhibited greatly reduced levels of all the major viral glycoproteins at the infected cell surface, indicating that these mutants possess defects in the synthesis or processing of viral glycoproteins; and (iii) in cells infected with one mutant, all viral glycoproteins were precipitable at the surface of the infected cell, despite the resistance of these cells to cytolysis. This mutant is most likely mutated in a gene affecting a late stage in glycoprotein processing, leading to altered presentation of glycoproteins at the plasma membrane. The finding that the synthesis of both gB and gC was affected coordinately in cells infected with six of the nine mutants suggests that synthesis of these two glycoproteins, their transport to the cell surface, or their insertion into plasma membranes is coordinately regulated.  相似文献   

16.
Studies were done to characterize a DNA-negative temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant of human adenovirus type 2, H2 ts111. The temperature-sensitive defect, which was reversible on shift-down in the absence of protein synthesis, was expressed as early as 2 h postinfection, and the results of density-labeling experiments are in agreement with at least a DNA replication initiation block. On shift-up, after allowing viral DNA synthesis at permissive temperatures, the newly synthesized viral DNA and the mature viral DNA were cleaved into fragments which sedimented as a broad peak with a mean coefficient of 10-12S. This cleavage was more marked in the presence of hydroxyurea as the DNA synthesis inhibitor. Parental DNA in infected cells was degraded to a much lesser extent regardless of the incubation temperature. In contrast, the parental DNA was strongly degraded when early gene expression was permitted at 33 degrees C before shift-up to 39.5 degrees C. Furthermore, cellular DNA was also degraded at 39.5 degrees C in ts111-infected cells, the rate of cleavage being related to the multiplicity of infection. This cleavage effect, which did not seem to be related to penton base-associated endonuclease activity, was also enhanced when early gene expression was allowed at 33 degrees C before shift-up. The ts111 defect, which was related to an initiation block and endonucleolytic cleavage of viral and cellular DNA, seemed to correspond to a single mutation. The implication of the ts111 gene product in protection of viral and cellular DNA by way of a DNase-inhibitory function is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Eleven temperature-sensitive mutants of herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) exhibit overlapping patterns of complementation that define four functional groups. Recombination tests confirmed the assignment of mutants to complementation groups 1 through 4 and permitted the four groups to be ordered in an unambiguous linear array. Combined recombination and marker rescue tests (A. E. Spang, P. J. Godowski, and D. M. Knipe, J. Virol. 45:332-342, 1983) indicate that the mutations lie in a tight cluster near the center of UL to the left of the gene for DNA polymerase in the order 4-3-2-1-polymerase. The seven mutants that make up groups 1 and 2 fail to complement each other and mutants in HSV-1 complementation group 1-1, the group thought to define the structural gene for the major HSV-1 DNA-binding protein with a molecular weight of 130,000. At 38 degrees C, mutants in groups 1 and 2 synthesize little or no viral DNA, and unlike cells infected with the wild-type virus, mutant-infected cells exhibit no detectable nuclear antigen reactive with monoclonal or polypeptide-specific antibody to the major HSV-2 DNA-binding protein. The four mutants that make up groups 3 and 4 do not complement each other, nor do they complement mutants in group 2. They do, however, complement mutants in group 1 as well as representative mutants of HSV-1 complementation group 1-1. At 38 degrees C, mutants in groups 3 and 4 are phenotypically DNA+, and nuclei of mutant-infected cells contain the HSV-2 DNA-binding protein. Thus, the four functional groups appear to define two closely linked genes, one encoding an early viral function affecting both viral DNA synthesis and expression of the DNA-binding protein with a molecular weight of 130,000 (groups 1 and 2), and the other encoding a previously unidentified late viral function (groups 3 and 4). The former gene presumably represents the structural gene for the major HSV-2 DNA-binding protein.  相似文献   

18.
Nineteen frog virus 3 temperature-sensitive mutants were isolated after mutagenesis with nitrosoguanidine and assayed for viral DNA, RNA, and protein synthesis, as well as assembly site formation at permissive (25 degrees C) and nonpermissive (30 degrees C) temperatures. In addition, mutants were characterized for complementation by both quantitative and qualitative assays. Based on the genetic and biochemical data, the 19 mutants, along with 9 mutants isolated earlier, were ordered into four phenotypic classes which define defects in virion morphogenesis (class I), late mRNA synthesis (class II), viral assembly site formation (class III), and viral DNA synthesis (class IV). In addition, we used two-factor crosses to order 11 mutants, comprising 7 complementation groups, onto a linkage map spanning 77 recombination units.  相似文献   

19.
Host DNA synthesis is induced when CV-1 (monkey kidney) cell cultures are infected at 40 C with wild-type virions or with temperature-sensitive Simian virus 40 mutants of the "early" complementation group A. Host DNA synthesis is not induced when cultures are infected with mutants of the late complementation group D. The simplest explanation for these observations, that induction depends not upon the expression of some early gene function but rather on the presence of an active D protein in the infecting virion, has been examined. Indirect experiments suggest that this explanation is not correct. Moreover, the induction of host DNA synthesis is impaired when cultures are infected with mutants of the A group at 42.5 C rather than 40 C, suggesting that the A function may be responsible for host induction. The inability of D virions to induce host DNA synthesis may reflect their inability to "uncoat" at 40C.  相似文献   

20.
Sixteen temperature-sensitive mutants of Sendai virus were isolated from mutagenized stocks (10 mutants, designated numerically) and persistently infected cultures (6 mutants, designated alphabetically). Based on complementation tests, virion-associated activities, thermal inactivation, and viral RNA and hemadsorbing antigen synthesis as well as virion production in chick lung embryo cells at nonpermissive temperature, these mutants were divided into seven groups as follows. i) HANA group mutants (ts-5, -9, -10, -201), defective in hemagglutinin-neuraminidase protein, complementation group I. ii) F group mutants (ts-18, -108), defective in hemolytic and cell-fusing activity, complementation group II. iii) Ts-43, defective in RNA polymerase activity, complementation group III. iv) Ts-23, defective in RNA polymerase activity, interfered with the other mutants in complementation tests. v) Ts-25, defective in the incorporation of hemagglutinin-neuraminidase protein into the virion at the stage of virus assembly. vi) Ts-110, belongs to F group mutants on one hand, but is considered to carry another undetermined defect. vii) C group (carrier culture-borne group) mutants (ts-a, -b, -c, -d, -e, -f), defective lesion not yet determined and belong to neither complementation group I nor II. Assignment of mutants in groups iv), v), vi), and vii) to complementation groups could not be achieved.  相似文献   

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