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The expression of herpes simplex virus gamma 2 (late) genes is inhibited before the onset of viral DNA replication. We report that the block in the expression of certain gamma 2 genes is relieved, at least in part, by defects in the beta ICP8 protein. We have examined the expression of the gamma 2 gene encoding glycoprotein C (gC) in cells infected with a temperature-sensitive ICP8 mutant. Under conditions in which viral DNA replication is inhibited, cells infected with the ICP8 mutant overproduce the gC family of mRNAs relative to the level observed in cells infected with a wild-type virus. The gC mRNA synthesized in cells infected with the ICP8 mutant virus is correctly initiated and spliced and is translated with the same relative efficiency as in cells infected with a replicating wild-type virus. These results suggest that ICP8 is involved in the negative regulation of gamma 2 genes expressed from parental viral genomes. The level of gC expression was greatest in cells infected with a replicating wild-type virus. These data suggest that DNA replication and genome amplification are not absolute requirements for gamma 2 gene expression but may facilitate full-level expression of these genes.  相似文献   

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During the course of a productive infection with herpes simplex virus (HSV), gene expression is coordinately regulated in a cascade fashion. Three major kinetic classes of genes, termed alpha, beta, and gamma, are sequentially activated. The mechanism responsible for repression and subsequent activation of beta and gamma genes is not known. A mobility-shift electrophoresis assay was used to examine DNA fragments containing the promoter/regulatory and the mRNA leader regions of the thymidine kinase gene (TK, a model beta gene) for their ability to bind proteins present in nuclear extracts prepared from uninfected and infected cells. Specific complexes unique to each extract were formed. Using a monoclonal antibody specific for ICP4 (the major regulatory protein of HSV) we demonstrated that this protein is present in the complexes formed between probes encompassing either the promoter/regulatory or leader sequence DNAs and proteins in infected-cell extracts. These complexes formed despite the lack of a high affinity binding site for ICP4 in either of these regions. The stability of complexes formed in infected-cell extracts with DNA probes containing the promoter/regulatory, leader region, and a high affinity ICP4-binding site were compared by dissociation analysis. The relative kd(obs) for these DNA-protein complexes was in the order: TK-leader region much greater than TK-promoter/regulatory region greater than or equal to high affinity ICP4-binding site. Cu+/1,10-phenanthroline footprinting revealed that infected-cell complexes which form on a probe containing a high affinity ICP4-binding site generate a protection pattern, whereas those formed on a probe containing the TK-leader sequence do not. In contrast, complexes formed with the latter probe in extracts from uninfected cells are kinetically stable and refractile to cleavage. A model for activation of the TK gene which incorporates these results is presented.  相似文献   

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