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1.
We have isolated replicative intermediates of bacteriophage φX174 and the related baeteriophage G4, during RF (replicative form) DNA replication using different procedures. Biochemical and electron microscopic analysis of φX and G4 DNA replicative intermediates isolated by the same procedure, showed no significant differences. In the replication cycle of both phages rolling circles and gapped RF DNA molecules are the predominant replicative intermediates. It is concluded that G4 RF DNA also replicates according to a rolling circle model and not according to a D-looped replication model as proposed by Godson (1977b).  相似文献   

2.
Lack of repair of ultraviolet light damage in Mycoplasma gallisepticum   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Molecules with single-stranded tails (rolling circles) were isolated as replicating intermediates in G4 progeny single-stranded DNA synthesis. Lysates from infected cells harvested late in infection during single-stranded DNA synthesis were not deproteinised but analysed directly in caesium chloride and propidium diiodide gradients. The gradient fractionated them on the basis of tail length. If the lysates were first deproteinised however, the tailed replicative intermediates banded as a peak at a density just greater than that of replicative form II DNA (RFII) and did not spread down the gradient. The origin of synthesis of the viral strand tail was mapped by electron microscopy as 55 to 60% away from the single EcoRI cleavage site. Termination molecules finishing a round of viral strand DNA synthesis have been identified as molecules consisting of a closed single-stranded DNA circle attached by a very small region to the parent double-stranded DNA circle.  相似文献   

3.
In a preceding paper (Schröder and Kaerner, 1972) a rolling circle mechanism has been described for the replication of bacteriophage φX174 replicative form. Replication involved nicking and elongation of the viral (positive) strand component of the RF molecule resulting in the displacement of a single-strand tail of increasing length. The synthesis of the new complementary (negative) strand on the single-strand tails appears to be initiated with considerable delay and converts the tail into double-stranded DNA. Before the new negative strand is completed the replicative intermediates split into (I) a complete RF molecule containing the “old” negative and the new positive strand, and (II) a linear, partially double-stranded “tail” consisting of the complete old positive strand and a fragment of the new negative strand.The present study is concerned with the fate during RF replication of these fragments of the rolling circles. Those RFII molecules containing the old negative strands appear to go into further replication rounds repeatedly. Some of the tails were found in the infected cells in their original linear form. “Gapped” RFII molecules, which have been described earlier by Schekman and co-workers (Schekman &; Ray, 1971; Schekman et al., 1971), are supposed to originate from the tails of rolling circle intermediates by circularization of their positive strand components. Evidence is provided by our experiments that even late during RF replication these gaps are present only in the negative strands of RFII. Appropriate chase experiments indicated that the tails finally are converted to RFI molecules. Progeny RFI molecules could not be observed to start new replication rounds under our conditions although we cannot exclude that this might happen to some minor extent.The results presented suggest that the master templates for RF replication are the first negative strands to be formed, rather than the parental positive strands.  相似文献   

4.
On incubation with deoxynucleoside triphosphates and rATP, ether-treated (nucleotide-permeable) cells convert the single-stranded DNA of adsorbed bacteriophage φX174 particles to the double-stranded replicative forms. The main final product is the doubly-closed replicative form, RFI; a minor product is the relaxed form II. Interruptions in the nascent complementary strand of the viral DNA result in pieces corresponding to 5 to 10% of the unit length of the viral DNA. Pieces of similar size were previously seen in studies of the replication synthesis of Escherichia, coli DNA in ether-treated cells. Since the conversion of the single-stranded φX174 DNA to replicative form is known to be mediated entirely by host factors, it is argued that the viral single strands are replicated by macromolecular factors involed in the replication of E. coli DNA and that this is the reason why new φX174 DNA appears in short pieces. Possible consequences of this interpretation for an understanding of duplex replication are discussed. The joining of the short pieces of complementary φX174 DNA is inhibited at low deoxynucleoside triphosphate concentration (1 μM) but not by nicotinamide mononucleotide, which inhibits the NAD-dependent DNA ligase and blocks the conversion of RFII to RFI in ether-treated cells. The results are discussed with respect to previous studies on cell-DNA synthesis (Geider, 1972). It is argued that there are two polynucleotide joining mechanisms, of which only one requires NAD-dependent ligase action.  相似文献   

5.
We have studied the replication of φX174 DNA in Escherichia coli infected with various amber mutants (cistrons I to VII) of φX. Previous research showing that some of these mutants are able to form replicative form (RF) DNA but are unable to produce net amounts of viral progeny single-stranded DNA has been confirmed and extended. Evidence is presented that a defect in any one of four viral cistrons prevents the asymmetric replication of the RF to produce progeny viral DNA. At least four virus-coded proteins, three of which are part of the mature virion, must be present before single-stranded DNA synthesis can even be initiated; the possibility that single-stranded DNA is made and then degraded or converted to RF is eliminated. Mutants in one cistron (II) do permit the asymmetric replication of RF at late times, but the displaced viral strand is incorporated into a defective particle and subsequently may be partially degraded. Both RFI (superhelix) and RFII are present in roughly comparable amounts throughout the normal latent period in infections with wild-type phage or any of the phage mutants.  相似文献   

6.
Five distinct DNA replicating intermediates have been separated from lysates of bacteriophage G4-infected cells pulse-labelled during the period of replicative form synthesis using propidium diiodide/caesium chloride gradients. These are a partially single-stranded theta structure that is labelled in both the viral and complementary DNA strands; partially single-stranded circles, some with an unfinished viral DNA strand (25%) and some with an unfinished complementary DNA strand (75%); replicative form II(RFII) and replicative form I(RFI) DNA labelled only in the complementary DNA strand. To explain the pulse-label data a model is proposed in which G4 replicative form replication takes place by a displacement mechanism in which synthesis of the new viral DNA strand displaces the old viral DNA strand as a single-stranded DNA loop (D-loop) and when the displacement reaches half way round the molecule (the origin of synthesis of the G4 viral and complementary DNA strands are on opposite sides of the genome, Martin &; Godson 1977) synthesis of the complementary DNA strand starts, but in the opposite direction. Strand separation of the parent helix runs ahead of DNA synthesis, releasing two partially single-stranded circles from the replicating structure which then complete their replication as free single-stranded DNA circles. No evidence was found to support a rolling circle displacement mechanism of G4 replicative form synthesis.  相似文献   

7.
Late in the life cycle of the single-stranded DNA phage phi X, the synthesis of positive strand DNA is coupled to the maturation of progeny virions. DNA synthesis and packaging take place in a replication-assembly complex, which we have purified to homogeneity and characterized. The following conclusions can be drawn: 1. The DNA component of the replication-assembly complex is a rolling circle with a single-stranded DNA tail which is less than or equal to genome length. 2. The major protein component of the replication-assembly complex is an intact viral capsid, as shown by gel analysis of 35S-labeled complexes. As replication proceeds at the DNA growing point, the positive strand tail of the rolling circle is displaced directly into the capsid. In addition to the capsid, the complex contains at least 1 molecule of the phi X gene A nicking protein, which appears to be covalently linked to the DNA. 3. The rolling circle . capsid complex can be purified to homogeneity by taking advantage of its uniform sedimentation velocity (35 S) and its uniform density upon equilibrium centrifugation in CsCl (1.50 g/cc). 4. The replication-assembly complex can be visualized in the electron microscope. An electron-dense particle, which has the dimensions of a viral capsid, is observed attached to a rolling circle at the DNA growing point. 5. Hybridization of specific phi X restriction fragments to the deproteinized, single-stranded tails of intact rolling circles has allowed the use of these replicating intermediates to determine both the origin/terminus and the direction of phi X positive strand DNA synthesis. The ends of the rolling circle tails map in the Hae III restriction Fragment Z6b, at the position on the phi X genome at which the gene A endonuclease is known to cut. This result indicates that this endonuclease participates in the "termination" of each round of synthesis by cutting off unit-length viral genomes. 6. Rolling circle . capsid complexes were also isolated from two other icosahedral, single-stranded DNA phages: G4 and St-1. The rolling circle . capsid complex seen in the case of the single-stranded DNA phages represents the first example of a structure in which DNA synthesis and viral assembly occur in a coupled manner. This tight coordination explains why double-stranded DNA circles are the net product of synthesis early in the viral life cycle while only single-stranded DNA circles are produced later. The single-stranded tails of the rolling circle intermediates are available for conversion to the duplex state at early times, whereas the concentration of preformed capsids later is high enough to bind to all of the replicating molecules and package the emerging positive strand DNA.  相似文献   

8.
The rolling circle DNA replication structures generated by the in vitro phage T4 replication system were analyzed using two-dimensional agarose gels. Replication structures were generated in the presence or absence of T4 primase (gp61), permitting the analysis of replication forks with either duplex or single-stranded tails. A characteristic arc shape was visualized when forks with single-stranded tails were cleaved by a restriction enzyme with the help of an oligonucleotide that anneals to restriction sites in the single-stranded tail. After calibrating the gel system with this well-studied rolling circle replication reaction, we then analyzed the in vivo replication directed by a T4 replication origin cloned within a plasmid. DNA samples were generated from infections with either wild-type or primase-deletion mutant phage. The only replicative arc that could be detected in the wild-type sample corresponded to duplex Y forms, consistent with very efficient lagging strand synthesis. Surprisingly, we obtained evidence for both duplex and single-stranded DNA tails in the samples from the primase-deficient infection. We conclude that a relatively inefficient mechanism primes lagging strand DNA synthesis in vivo when gp61 is absent.  相似文献   

9.
Binding of Escherichia coli RNA polymerase to φX174 DNA replicative form (RF) has been studied by electron microscopy. Samples of the binary complexes were spread for observation upon polylysine-coated carbon films. Binding was obtained with both RFI and RFIII forms of the DNA; complexes formed with the former were treated with restriction enzyme PstI before spreading. A histogram constructed from the positions of 558 polymerase molecules bound to 181 DNA strands exhibited three prominent, sharp peaks at 3.3 × 102 nucleotides, 39.7 × 102 nucleotides and 49.0 × 102 nucleotides from the PstI cleavage point. These positions correspond closely to those of the D, A and B promoter sequences, as derived from φX174 DNA sequence data by Sanger et al. (1977).  相似文献   

10.
Data from prokaryotic replicative and conjugative systems, which interrelate DNA processing events initiated by a site-specific nick, are reviewed. While the replicative systems have been established in accordance with the rolling circle replication model, the mechanism of conjugative replication has not been elucidated experimentally. We summarize data involving random point mutagenesis of the RK2 transfer origin (oriT), which yielded relaxation-deficient and transfer-deficient derivatives having mutations exclusively in a 10bp region defined as the nick region. Features of the RK2 (IncP) nick region, including the DNA sequence, nick site position, and 5′ covalent attachment of the nicking protein, have striking parallels in other systems involving nicking and mobilization of single-stranded DNA from a supercoiled substrate. These other systems include T-DNA transfer occurring in Agrobacterium tumefaciens Ti plasmid-mediated tumorigenesis in plants, and the rolling circle replication of plasmids of Gram-positive bacteria and of φX174-like bacteriophage. The structural and functional similarities suggest that IncP conjugative replication, originating at the oriT, and T-DNA transfer replication, originating at the T-DNA border, produce continuous strands via a rolling circle-type replication.  相似文献   

11.
Gene A protein of bacteriophage phi X174 plays a role as a site-specific endonuclease in the initiation and termination of phi X rolling circle DNA replication. To clarify the sequence requirements of this protein we have studied the cleavage of single-stranded restriction fragments from phi X and G4 viral DNAs using purified gene A protein. The results show that in both viral DNAs cleavage occurs at the origin and at one additional site which shows striking sequence homology with the origin region. During rolling circle replication the single-stranded viral DNA tail is covered with single-stranded DNA binding (SSB) protein. Therefore, we have also studied the effect of SSB on phi X gene A protein cleavage. In these conditions only single-stranded fragments containing the complete or almost complete origin region of 30 bases are cleaved, whereas cleavage at the additional sites of phi X or G4 viral DNAs does not occur. A model for termination of rolling circle replication which is based on these findings is presented. Finally, we present evidence that the second product of gene A, the A* protein, cleaves phi X viral DNA at the additional cleavage site in the presence of SSB, not only in vitro but also in vivo. The functional significance of this cleavage in vivo is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Backert S 《Plasmid》2000,43(2):166-170
The structure of sigma-like mitochondrial DNA molecules prepared from suspension cultured cells of Chenopodium album (L.) was studied by electron microscopy. These molecules were highly variable in size, ranging from about 1 to 104 kb, and had single- and double-stranded regions typical for rolling circle replicating intermediates. Partial denaturation studies confirmed that these structures constitute rolling circles. Close inspection of the circle-tail junctions of the replication fork at high magnification suggests that in circles with a double-stranded tail, both strands of the tail seem to be covalently attached to the circle in about 27% of the molecules. This observation can be explained by a phenomenon called strand switching or strand splippage during rolling circle replication, similar to a mechanism proposed for bacterial replicons or in vitro replicating constructs harboring bacteriophage T4 replication origins.  相似文献   

13.
Conversion of phi X174 viral, single-stranded circular DNA to the duplex replicative form (RF), previously observed with partially purified enzymes, has now been demonstrated with the participation of 12 nearly pure Escherichia coli proteins containing approximately 30 polypeptides. To complete the synthesis of a full length complementary strand, E. coli DNA polymerase I was needed to fill the short gap left by DNA polymerase III holoenzyme, and to remove the primer and replace it with DNA. Production of supercoiled RF required the further actions of E. coli DNA ligase and gyrase. Net synthesis of viral circles was obtained by coupling the formation of RF supercoils to the actions of the phi X174-encoded gene A protein and E. coli rep protein. Viral DNA circles produced from enzymatically synthesized supercoiled RF, serving as template-substrate, were indistinguishable from those produced from RF isolated from infected cells; synthetic RF and the viral circles generated from it by replication were as biologically active in transfection of spheroplasts as the forms obtained from infected cells and virions. The conversion of single-stranded circular DNA to RF is suggested here as a model for discontinuous synthesis of the lagging strand of the E. coli chromosome. The primosome, a complex of some of the replication proteins responsible for initiations of DNA chains, will be described elsewhere. Multiplication of RF supercoils, described in the succeeding paper, proceeds by a rolling-circle mechanism in which the synthesis of viral strands may have analogies to the continuous synthesis of the leading strand of the E. coli chromosome.  相似文献   

14.
Origin and direction phiX174 double- and single-stranded DNA synthesis   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
The origin and direction of both φX174 double-stranded and single-stranded DNA synthesis has been determined by pulsing replicating viral DNA molecules with [3H]thymidine for periods of less than one round of DNA synthesis and examining distribution of activity in the Haemophilus influenzae restriction endonuclease (Hin) DNA fragments of these molecules. In early RFI and RFII DNA intermediates in double-stranded DNA replication, gradients of label were observed which started in the R3 fragment (cistron A) and increased towards the R4 fragment (cistron H). The origin of synthesis is near the R4/R3 junction of the R3 fragment. Thus, φX174 double-stranded DNA synthesis proceeds clockwise around the genetic map (5′ → 3′), in one direction only and starting in the region of cistron A, a conclusion consistent with the genetic experiments of Baas &; Jansz (1972). Similar experiments with the gapped late RFII DNA molecules that have just completed a round of single-stranded viral DNA synthesis demonstrated that φX174 single-stranded DNA synthesis also has a single origin of replication in the region of cistron A, and that the synthesis moves in the 5′ → 3′ direction, around the genetic map. The gap in both the early and the late RFII DNA molecules also appears to be in the R3 fragment containing cistron A.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The geometry of replicative form (RF) DNA synthesis of the H-1 parvovirus was studied with the electron microscope using formamide or aqueous variations of the Kleinschmidt spreading procedure. H-1 DNA was isolated from human or hamster cells infected with a temperature-sensitive mutant, ts1, which is deficient in progeny single-stranded DNA synthesis at the restrictive temperature (S.L. Rhode, 1976), thus minimizing possible confusion between RF and progeny DNA replicative intermediates (RIs). The purity of the isolated H-1 DNA, as determined by gel electrophoresis, ethidium bromide staining, autoadiography, and digestion with endo R-EcoRI, was high. H-1 RF DNA'S WERE LINEAR DOUBLE-STRANDED MOLECULES, 1.53 MUM IN LENGTH. H-1 RIs of RF DNA replication were double-stranded, Y-shaped molecules, with the same length as RF DNAs. The replication origin was localized no more than 0.15 genome lengths from one end of the RF DNA, with replication proceeding toward the other end at a uniform rate. Similar RF and RI molecules of dimer size were also observed. The length of H-1 single-stranded DNA extracted from purified virions was measured relative to that of phiX174 and it had a very similar contour length, so that the molecular weight of H-1 single-stranded DNA would be at least 1.48 X 10(6) to 1.59 X 10(6) (Berkowitz and Day, 1974).  相似文献   

17.
A DNA form with restricted binding of intercalating dyes (propidium iodide or ethidium bromide) has been found in bacteriophage φX-infected cells during the period of single-stranded DNA synthesis. In the electron microscope, this DNA form is seen to be a double-stranded DNA ring with two single-stranded DNA tails protruding from the same portion of the ring; it is composed of a linear φX DNA strand, longer than one φX genome, and a single-stranded ring complementary to φX DNA. Base-pairing of these two tails in partially complementary regions restricts unwinding of the double-stranded DNA ring and consequently intercalation and binding of the dyes. It is postulated that these molecules originate from a previously reported precursor of φX DNA, namely a double-stranded ring with a single-stranded tail, by branch migration.  相似文献   

18.
The 2.4-kb plasmid pAP1 from Arcanobacterium (Actinomyces) pyogenes had sequence similarity within the putative replication protein and double-stranded origin with the pIJ101/pJV1 family of plasmids. pJGS84, a derivative of pAP1 containing a kanamycin resistance gene, was able to replicate in Escherichia coli and Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis, as well as in A. pyogenes. Detection of single-stranded DNA intermediates of pJGS84 replication suggested that this plasmid replicates by the rolling circle mechanism.  相似文献   

19.
We isolated phi 29 DNA replicative intermediates from extracts of phage-infected Bacillus subtilis, pulsed-labeled with [3H]thymidine, by velocity sedimentation in neutral sucrose followed by CsCl equilibrium density gradient centrifugation. During a chase, the DNA with a higher sedimentation coefficient in neutral sucrose and a lower sedimentation rate in alkaline sucrose than that of viral phi 29 DNA was converted into mature DNA. The material with a density higher than that of mature phi 29 DNA consisted of replicative intermediates, as analyzed with an electron microscope. We found two major types of molecules. One consisted of unit-length duplex DNA with one single-stranded branch at a random position. The length of the single-stranded branches was similar to that of one of the double-stranded regions. The other type of molecules was unit-length DNA with one double-stranded region and one single-stranded region extending a variable distance from one end. Partial denaturation of the latter molecules showed that replication was initiated with a similar frequency from either DNA end. These findings suggest that phi 29 DNA replication occurs by a mechanism of strand displacement and that replication starts non-simultaneously from either DNA end, as in the case of adenovirus.  相似文献   

20.
DNA molecules with restricted binding of intercalating dyes are observed as replicative intermediates during the replication of bacteriophage M-13 duplex DNA in a cellular system in vitro prepared by plasmolysis of M-13-am5-infected Escherichia coli cells. Restriction of dye binding is abolished by heating the DNA to 80 degrees C, but can be recovered by slow cooling of the heat-treated DNA. Radioactive pulse-label incorporated by these molecules is found exclusively in elongated viral strands of more than one genome length. In the electron microscope this DNA fraction is seen to contain a significant number of duplex DNA rings with two single-stranded tails protruding from the same region of the ring. It is proposed that these structures arise by branch migration during the isolation of replicating molecules containing only one single-stranded tail. The topological constraint in these molecules is most likely caused by base-pairing between partially complementary regions of the two single-stranded tails.  相似文献   

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