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1.
S(1) nuclease, the single-strand specific nuclease from Aspergillus oryzae can cleave both strands of circular covalently closed, superhelical simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA to generate unit length linear duplex molecules with intact single strands. But circular, covalently closed, nonsuperhelical DNA, as well as linear duplex molecules, are relatively resistant to attack by the enzyme. These findings indicate that unpaired or weakly hydrogen-bonded regions, sensitive to the single strand-specific nuclease, occur or can be induced in superhelical DNA. Nicked, circular SV40 DNA can be cleaved on the opposite strand at or near the nick to yield linear molecules. S(1) nuclease may be a useful reagent for cleaving DNAs at regions containing single-strand nicks. Unlike the restriction endonucleases, S(1) nuclease probably does not cleave SV40 DNA at a specific nucleotide sequence. Rather, the sites of cleavage occur within regions that are readily denaturable in a topologically constrained superhelical molecule. At moderate salt concentrations (75 mM) SV40 DNA is cleaved once, most often within either one of the two following regions: the segments defined as 0.15 to 0.25 and 0.45 to 0.55 SV40 fractional length, clockwise, from the EcoR(I) restriction endonuclease cleavage site (defined as the zero position on the SV40 DNA map). In higher salt (250 mM) cleavage occurs preferentially within the 0.45 to 0.55 segment of the map.  相似文献   

2.
3.
W A Scott  D J Wigmore 《Cell》1978,15(4):1511-1518
Simian virus 40 (SV40) chromatin isolated from infected BSC-1 cell nuclei was incubated with deoxyribonuclease I, staphylococcal nuclease or an endonuclease endogenous to BSC-1 cells under conditions selected to introduce one doublestrand break into the viral DNA. Full-length linear DNA was isolated, and the distribution of sites of initial cleavage by each endonuclease was determined by restriction enzyme mapping. Initial cleavage of SV40 chromatin by deoxyribonuclease I or by endogenous nuclease reduced the recovery of Hind III fragment C by comparison with the other Hind III fragments. Similarly, Hpa I fragment B recovery was reduced by comparison with the other Hpa I fragments. When isolated SV40 DNA rather than SV40 chromatin was the substrate for an initial cut by deoxyribonuclease I or endogenous nuclease, the recovery of all Hind III or Hpa I fragments was approximately that expected for random cleavage. Initial cleavage by staphylococcal nuclease of either SV40 DNA or SV40 chromatin occurred randomly as judged by recovery of Hind III or Hpa I fragments. These results suggest that, in at least a portion of the SV40 chromatin population, a region located in Hind III fragment C and Hpa I fragment B is preferentially cleaved by deoxyribonuclease I or by endogenous nuclease but not by staphylococcal nuclease.Complementary information about this nuclease-sensitive region was provided by the appearance of clusters of new DNA fragments after restriction enzyme digestion of DNA from viral chromatin initially cleaved by endogenous nuclease. From the sizes of new fragments produced by different restriction enzymes, preferential endonucleolytic cleavage of SV40 chromatin has been located between map positions 0.67 and 0.73 on the viral genome.  相似文献   

4.
Sundin and Varshavsky (J. Mol. Biol. 132:535-546, 1979) found that nearly two-thirds of simian virus 40 (SV40) minichromosomes obtained from nuclei of SV40-infected cells become singly nicked or cleaved across both strands after digestion with staphylococcal nuclease at 0 degrees C. The same treatment of SV40 DNA causes complete digestion rather than the limited cleavages produced in minichromosomal DNA. We have explored this novel behavior of the minichromosome and found that the nuclease sensitivity is dependent upon the topology of the DNA. Thus, if minichromosomes are pretreated with wheat germ DNA topoisomerase I, the minichromosomal DNA is completely resistant to subsequent digestion with staphylococcal nuclease at 0 degrees C. If the minichromosome-associated topoisomerase is removed, virtually all of the minichromosomes are cleaved to nicked or linear structures by the nuclease treatment. The cleavage sites are nonrandomly located; instead they occur at discrete loci throughout the SV40 genome. SV40 minichromosomal DNA is also cleaved to nicked circles and full-length linear fragments after treatment with the single strand-specific endonuclease S1; this cleavage is also inhibited by pretreatment with topoisomerase I. Thus, it may be that the nuclease sensitivity of minichromosomes is due to the transient or permanent unwinding of discrete regions of their DNA. Direct comparisons of the extent of negative supercoiling of native and topoisomerase-treated SV40 minichromosomes revealed that approximately two superhelical turns were removed by the topoisomerase treatment. The loss of these extra negative supercoils from the DNA probably accounts for the resistance of the topoisomerase-treated minichromosomes to the staphylococcal and S1 nucleases. These findings suggest that the DNA in SV40 intranuclear minichromosomes is torsionally strained. The functional significance of this finding is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Enzymic digestion of Simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA with Haemophilus aegyptius restriction endonuclease Hae III results in 10 major and eight minor fragments. These were resolved by electrophoresis on graduated polyacrylamide slab gels. All fragments have been characterized with respect to the size relative to the Haemophilus influenzae Rd fragments (Hind). They were ordered on the SV40 DNA map by means of overlap analysis of the double cleavage products derived from sequential digestion of Hind fragments with Hae III endonuclease and Hae fragments with Hind II + III enzyme, as well as by other reciprocal cleavage experiments, including those involving Haemophilus para-influenzae fragments. In this way the 18 Hae III cleavage sites and the 13 Hind sites have been localized on the circular SV40 DNA map.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Mutants of simian virus 40 (SV40), with deletions ranging in size from fewer than 3 to 750 base pairs located throughout the SV40 genome, were obtained by infecting CV-1P cells with linear SV40 DNA and DNA of an appropriate helper virus. The linear DNA was obtained by complete cleavage of closed circular DNA with Hae II or Bam HI endonuclease or partial cleavage with either Hae III endonuclease or nuclease S1, followed, in some cases, by mild digestion with phage lambda 5' -exonuclease. The following mutants with deletions in the late region of the SV40 genome were obtained and characterized. Ten, containing deletions at the Hae II endonuclease site (map location 0.83), define a new genetic complementation group, E, grow extremely slowly without helper virus, and cause alterations only in VP2. Two mutants with deletions in the region 0.92 to 0.945 affect both VP2 and VP3, demonstrating that VP3 shares sequences with the C-terminal portion of VP2. The mutant with a deletion at 0.93 is the first deletion mutant in the D complementation group and is also temperature sensitive; the mutant with a deletion at 0.94 is viable and grows normally. Three mutants with deletions at the EcoRI endonuclease site (0/1.0) and eleven with deletions at the BamHI endonuclease site (0.15) fall into the B/C complementation group. Six additional mutants with deletions at the BamHI endonuclease site are viable, growing more slowly than wild type. VP1 is the only polypeptide affected by mutants in the B/C group. A mutant with a deletion of the region 0.72 to 0.80 has a polar effect, failing to express the E, D, and B/C genes. Mutants with deletions in the early region (0.67 counterclockwise to 0.17) at 0.66 to 0.59, 0.48, 0.47, 0.33, and 0.285 to 0.205 are all members of the A complementation group. Thus, the A gene is the only viral gene in the early region whose expression is necessary for productive infection of permissive cells. Since mutants with deletions in the region 0.59 to 0.54 are viable, two separate regions are essential for expression of the gene A function: 0.66 to 0.59 and 0.54 to 0.21. Mutants with deletions at 0.21 and 0.18 are viable. Approximate map locations of SV40 genes and possible models for their regulation are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
SV40 DNA FO I is randomly cleaved by S1 nuclease both at moderate (50 mM) and higher salt concentrations (250 mM NaC1). Full length linear S1 cleavage products of SV40 DNA when digested with various restriction endonucleases revealed fragments that were electrophoretically indistinguishable from the products found after digestion of superhelical SV40 DNA FO I with the corresponding enzyme. Concordingly, when the linear S1 generated duplexes were melted and renatured, circular duplexes were formed in addition to complex larger structures. This indicated that cleavage must have occurred at different sites. The double-strand-cleaving activity present in S1 nuclease preparations requires circular DNA as a substrate, as linear SV40 DNA is not cleaved. With regard to these properties S1 nuclease resembles some of the complex type I restriction nucleases from Escherichia coli which also cleave SV40 DNA only once, and, completely at random.  相似文献   

9.
DNA molecules cut with endonuclease R Eco Ri can be joined at Eco Ri cleavage sites by incubation with polynucleotide ligase. In order to define the optimum conditions for this reaction, linear Simian Virus 40 DNA molecules (SV40(Lri)) produced by endonuclease R Eco Ri cleavage of SV40 form i DNA were joined using polynucleotide ligases specified by bacteriophage T4 and Escherichia coli. We have determined that the concentration of the substrate DNA molecules is the most important factor determining the distribution of covalently joined product molecules into a variety of circular and linear monomeric and oligomeric species.  相似文献   

10.
The P1 restriction endonuclease (EcoP1) prepared from a P1 lysogen of Escherichia coli makes one double-strand break in simian virus (SV40) DNA. In the presence of cofactors S-adenosylmethionine and ATP the enzyme cleaves 70% of the closed circular SV40 DNA molecules once to produce unit-length linear molecules and renders the remaining 30% resistant to further cleavage. No molecules were found by electron microscopy or by gel electrophoresis that were cleaved more than once. It would appear that the double-strand break is made by two nearly simultaneous single-strand breaks, since no circular DNA molecules containing one single-strand break were found as intermediates during the cleavage reaction. The EcoP1 endonuclease-cleaved linear SV40 DNA molecules are not cleaved at a unique site, as shown by the generation of about 65% circular molecules after denaturation and renaturation. These EcoP1 endonuclease-cleaved, renatured circular molecules are resistant to further cleavage by EcoP1 endonuclease.The EcoP1 endonuclease cleavage sites on SV40 DNA were mapped relative to the partial denaturation map and to the EcoRI and HpaII restriction endonuclease cleavage sites. These maps suggest there are a minimum of four unique but widely spaced cleavage sites at 0.09, 0.19, 0.52, and 0.66 SV40 units relative to the EcoRI site. The frequency of cleavage at any particular site differs from that at another site. If S-adenosylmethionine is omitted from the enzyme reaction mix, SV40 DNA is cleaved into several fragments.An average of 4.6 ± 1 methyl groups are transferred to SV40 DNA from S-adenosylmethionine during the course of a normal reaction containing the cofactors. Under conditions which optimize this methylation, 7 ± 1 methyl groups can be transferred to DNA. This methylation protects most of the molecules from further cleavage. The methyl groups were mapped relative to the Hemophilus influenzae restriction endonuclease fragments. The A fragment receives three to four methyl groups and the B and G fragments each receive one to two methyl groups. These fragments correspond to those in which cleavage sites are located.  相似文献   

11.
The structure of simian virus 40 (SV40) chromatin was probed by treatment with single- and multiple-site bacterial restriction endonucleases. Approximately the same fraction of the chromatin DNA was cleaved by each of three different single-site endonucleases, indicating that the nucleosomes do not have unique positions with regard to specific nucleotide sequences within the population of chromatin molecules. However, the extent of digestion was found to be strongly influenced by salt concentration. At 100 mM NaCl-5 mM MgCl2, only about 20% of the simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA I in chromatin was converted to linear SV40 DNA III. In contrast, at lower concentrations of NaCl (0.05 or 0.01 M), an additional 20 to 30% of the DNA was cleaved. These results suggest that at 100 mM NaCl only the DNA between nucleosomes was accessible to the restriction enzymes, whereas at the lower salt concentrations, DNA within the nucleosome regions became available for cleavage. Surprisingly, when SV40 chromatin was digested with multiple-site restriction enzymes, less than 2% of the DNA was digested to limit digest fragment, whereas only a small fraction (9 to 15%) received two or more cuts. Instead, the principal digest fragment was full-length linear SV40 DNA III. The failure to generate limit digest fragments was not a consequence of reduced enzyme activity in the reaction mixtures or of histone exchange. When the position of the principal cleavage site was mapped after HpaI digestion, it was found that this site was not unique. Nevertheless, all sites wree not cleaved with equal probability. An additional finding was that SV40 chromatin containing nicked-circular DNA II produced by random nicking of DNA I was also resistant to digestion by restriction enzymes. These results suggest that the initial cut which causes relaxation of topological constraint in SV40 chromatin DNA imparts resistance to further digestion by restriction enzymes. We propose that this may be accomplished by either "winding" of the internucleosomal DNA into the body of the nucleosome, or as suggested by others, by successive right-hand rotation of nucleosomes.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
The genomes of the two nondefective adenovirus 2/simian virus 40 (Ad2/SV 40) hybrid viruses, nondefective Ad2/SV 40 hybrid virus 1 (Ad2+ND1) and nondefective hybrid virus 3 (Ad2+ND3), WERE FORMED BY A DELETION OF ABOUT 5% OF Ad2 DNA and insertion of part of the SV40 genome. We have compared the cytoplasmic RNA synthesized during both the early and late stages of lytic infection of human cells by these hybrid viruses to that expressed in Ad2-infected and SV40-infected cells. Separated strands of the six fragments of 32P-labeled Ad2 DNA produced by cleavage with the restriction endonuclease EcoRI (isolated from Escherichia coli) and the four fragments of 32P-labeled SV40 DNA produced by cleavage with both a restriction nuclease isolated from Haemophilus parainfluenzae, Hpa1, and EcoRI were prepared by electrophoresis of denatured DNA in agarose gels. The fraction of each fragment strand expressed as cytoplasmic RNA was determined by annealing fragmented 32P-labeled strands to an excess of cellular RNA extracted from infected cells. The segment of Ad2 DNA deleted from both hybrid virus genomes is transcribed into cytoplasmic mRNA during the early phase of Ad2 infection. Hence, we suggest that Ad2 codes for at least one "early" gene product which is nonessential for virus growth in cell culture. In both early Ad2+ND1 and Ad2+ND3-infected cells, 1,000 bases of Ad2 DNA adjacent to the integrated SV40 sequences are expressed as cytoplasmic RNA but are not similarly expressed in early Ad2-infected cells. The 3' termini of this early hybrid virus RNA maps in the vicinity of 0.18 on the conventional SV40 map and probably terminates at the same position as early lytic SV40 cytoplasmic RNA. Therefore, the base sequence in this region of SV40 DNA specifies the 3' termini of early messenger RNA present in both hybrid virus and SV40-infected cells.  相似文献   

14.
G Ruben  P Spielman  C D Tu  E Jay  B Siegel    R Wu 《Nucleic acids research》1977,4(6):1803-1813
We have determined the mode of cleavage of superhelical SV40 DNA (Form I) by restriction endonucleases EcoRI and HpaII at 37 degrees C. By analysis with agarose gel electrophoresis and direct examination with dark field electron microscopy, we found that a large amount of the single-nicked circular DNA (Form II) was produced before the linear SV40 DNA (Form III) appeared. Thus, both restriction enzymes cleave only one strand of the superhelical DNA first. The second cleavage on the complementary strand occurred after a lag period. The first order rate constant for the second cleavage by EcoRI endonuclease was determined and a kinetic reaction scheme for both enzymes is proposed.  相似文献   

15.
Studies of simian virus 40 DNA. VII. A cleavage map of the SV40 genome   总被引:91,自引:0,他引:91  
A physical map of the Simian virus 40 genome has been constructed on the basis of specific cleavage of Simian virus 40 DNA by bacterial restriction endonucleases. The 11 fragments produced by enzyme from Hemophilus influenzae have been ordered by analysis of partial digest products and by analysis of an overlapping set of fragments produced by enzyme from Hemophilus parainfluenzae. In addition, the single site in SV40 DNA cleaved by the Escherichia coli RI restriction endonuclease has been located. With this site as a reference point, the H. influenzae cleavage sites and the H. parainfluenzae cleavage sites have been localized on the map.  相似文献   

16.
Deleted genomes of simian virus 40 have been constructed by enzymatic excision of specific segments of DNA from the genome of wild-type SV402. For this purpose, a restriction endonuclease from Hemophilus influenzae (endo R · HindIII) was used. This enzyme cleaves SV40 DNA into six fragments, which have cohesive termini. Partial digest products were separated by electrophoresis in agarose gel and subsequently cloned by plaque formation in the presence of complementing temperature-sensitive mutants of SV40. Individual deletion mutants generated in this way were mapped by analysis of DNA fragments produced by endo R · Hind digestion of their deleted genomes, and by heteroduplex mapping. Two types of deletions were found: (1) “excisional” deletions, in which the limits of the deleted segment corresponded to HindIII cleavage sites, and (2) “extended” deletions, in which the deleted segment extended beyond HindIII cleavage sites. Excisionally deleted genomes presumably arose by cyclization of a linear fragment via cohesive termini generated by endo R · HindIII whereas genomes with extended deletions probably were generated by intramolecular recombination near the ends of linear fragments. Of the nine mutants analyzed, two had deletions in the “early” region of the SV40 genome, six had deletions in the “late” region, and one had a deletion that spanned both regions.  相似文献   

17.
A series of viable recombinants between adenovirus 2 (Ad2) and simian virus 40 (SV40) (nondefective Ad2-SV40 hybrids) have been isolated. The members of this series (designated Ad2(+)ND(1) through Ad2(+)ND(5)) differ from one another in the early SV40-specific antigens and the SV40-specific RNA species which they induce in infected cells. They also contain different amounts of SV40 DNA as shown by RNA-DNA hybridization techniques. We have examined the structure of the DNA molecules from these hybrids, using electron microscope heteroduplex mapping techniques. Each hybrid was found to contain a single segment of SV40 DNA of characteristic size covalently inserted at a unique location in the adenovirus 2 DNA molecule. The SV40 segments of the various hybrids formed an overlapping series with a common end point. When the results of the electron microscopic study were combined with data on antigen induction, it was found that a self-consistent map could be constructed which related specific regions of the SV40 genome to the induction of specific antigens. The order of these early SV40 antigen inducing regions in the SV40 DNA segments contained in the nondefective hybrids is: U antigen, tumor specific transplantation antigen, and T antigen with the U antigen region being nearest the common end point.  相似文献   

18.
Three simian virus (SV40)-phi X174 recombinant genomes were isolated from single BSC-1 monkey cells cotransfected with SV40 and phi X174 RF1 DNAs. The individual cell progenies were amplified, cloned, and mapped by a combination of restriction endonuclease and heteroduplex analyses. In each case, the 600 to 1,000 base pairs of phi X174 DNA (derived from different regions of the phi X174 genome) were present as single inserts, located in either the early or late SV40 regions; the deletion of SV40 DNA was greater than the size of the insert; and the remaining portions of the hybrid genome were indistinguishable from wild-type SV40 DNA, as judged by both mapping and biological tests. Hence, apart from the deletion which accommodates the phi X174 DNA insert, no other rearrangements of SV40 DNA were detected. The restriction map of a SV40-phi X174 recombinant DNA isolate before molecular cloning was indistinguishable from those of two separate cloned derivatives of that isolate, indicating that the species cloned was the major amplifiable recombinant structure generated by a single recombinant-producing cell. The relative simplicity of the SV40-phi X174 recombinant DNA examined is consistent with the notion that most recombinant-producing BSC-1 cells support single recombination events generating only one amplifiable recombinant structure.  相似文献   

19.
Mobility of histones on the chromosome of simian virus 40.   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
P Beard 《Cell》1978,15(3):955-967
Linear simian virus 40 (SV40) chromosomes were prepared by Eco R1 nuclease cleavage of the circular SV40 chromosomes released from virions with dithiothreitol at pH 9,8. Chromatin-DNA hybrids were constructed with segments of 3H-labeled, naked SV40 DNA covalently joined via the Eco R1-generated cohesive ends to segments of linear SV40 chromosome. Upon incubation of chromatin-DNA hybrids at 37 degrees C and moderate ionic strength, histones migrated onto the labeled DNA while retaining the nucleosome structure. This was shown first, by the pattern of micrococcal nuclease digestion of labeled DNA; second by nitrocellulose filter binding of labeled DNA after redigestion of the chromatin-DNA hybrids with Eco R1; and third, by examination of chromatin-DNA hybrids in the electron microscope. Migration was slow, being apparent after several hours. Parallel experiments in which naked DNA and chromosomes were mixed without joining showed no transfer of nucleosomal histones between DNA molecules. The kinetics of Eco R1 cleavage of the DNA in virion-derived SV40 chromosomes are also consistent with the notion that nucleosomal histones, in the absence of other proteins, can move on DNA.  相似文献   

20.
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