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1.
The UL5 gene product is required continuously during viral DNA synthesis (L. Zhu and S. K. Weller, Virology 166:366-378, 1988) and has been shown to be a component of a three protein helicase-primase complex encoded by herpes simplex virus type 1 (J. J. Crute, T. Tsurumi, L. Zhu, S. K. Weller, P.D. Olivo, M. D. Challberg, E. S. Mocarski, and I. R. Lehman, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86:2186-2189, 1989). The other members of the complex are viral proteins encoded by genes UL8 and UL52. In this study, we isolated a permissive cell line (L2-5) which contains the wild-type UL5 gene under the control of the strong and inducible promoter for the large subunit of herpes simplex virus type 1 ribonucleotide reductase (ICP6). An insertion mutant containing a mutation in the UL5 gene (hr99) was isolated by using the insertional mutagen ICP6::lacZ, in which the Escherichia coli lacZ gene is expressed under control of the viral ICP6 promoter. When grown on Vero cells, hr99 does not form plaques or synthesize viral DNA, although both defects are complemented efficiently on the L2-5 cells. These results confirm that the UL5 gene product is essential for viral growth and DNA replication. Furthermore, since no detectable UL5 protein is synthesized in hr99-infected cells, these cells provide a valuable control not only for the detection of the UL5 protein itself but also for the detection of protein-protein interactions with UL8 and UL52 by coimmunoprecipitation. In addition, the lacZ insertion in hr99 provides a convenient screening system for the introduction of site-specific mutations into the viral genome (L. Zhu and S. K. Weller, J. Virol. 66:469-479, 1992). Thus, hr99 is a valuable tool in the structure-function analysis of the UL5 gene.  相似文献   

2.
P L Ward  W O Ogle    B Roizman 《Journal of virology》1996,70(7):4623-4631
In cells infected with herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1), the viral proteins ICP5 (infected-cell protein 5) and VP19c (the product of UL38) are associated with mature capsids, whereas the same proteins, along with ICP35, are components of immature capsids. Here we report that ICP35, ICP5, and UL38 (VP19c) coalesce at late times postinfection and form antigenically dense structures located at the periphery of nuclei, close to but not abutting nuclear membranes. These structures were formed in cells infected with a virus carrying a temperature-sensitive mutation in the UL15 gene at nonpermissive temperatures. Since at these temperatures viral DNA is made but not packaged, these structures must contain the proteins for immature-capsid assembly and were therefore designated assemblons. These assemblons are located at the periphery of a diffuse structure composed of proteins involved in DNA synthesis. This structure overlaps only minimally with the assemblons. In contrast, tegument proteins were located in asymmetrically distributed structures also partially overlapping with assemblons but frequently located nearer to nuclear membranes. Of particular interest is the finding that the UL15 protein colocalized with the proteins associated with viral DNA synthesis rather than with assemblons, suggesting that the association with DNA may take place during its synthesis and precedes the involvement of this protein in packaging of the viral DNA into capsids. The formation of three different compartments consisting of proteins involved in viral DNA synthesis, the capsid proteins, and tegument proteins suggests that there exists a viral machinery which enables aggregation and coalescence of specific viral protein groups on the basis of their function.  相似文献   

3.
Previous studies have shown that cells infected with the herpes simplex virus 1(HFEM) mutant tsB7 and maintained at the nonpermissive temperature fail to accumulate viral polypeptides. Analyses of intertypic recombinants generated by marker rescue of tsB7 with herpes simplex virus 2 DNA fragments localized the mutation between 0.46 and 0.52 map units on the viral genome (Knipe et al., J. Virol. 38:539-547, 1981). In this paper we report that the mutation in tsB7 affects several aspects of the reproductive cycle of the virus at the nonpermissive temperature. Thus, (i) viral capsids accumulate at the nuclear pores and do not release viral DNA for at least 6 h postinfection at 39 degrees C. The DNA was released within 30 min after a shift to the permissive temperature. (ii) Experiments involving shifts from the permissive to the nonpermissive temperature indicated that viral protein synthesis was not sustained in cells maintained at the permissive temperature for less than 4 h. (iii) Viral DNA synthesis was delayed at the permissive temperature for as long as 8 h. Once initiated, it continued at 39 degrees C. (iv) Marker rescue of tsB7 by transfection with herpes simplex virus 1(F) DNA fragments localized the mutation to between 0.501 and 0.503 map units on the viral genome. These results are consistent with the tsB7 lesion being in a gene coding for a virion component which affects release of viral DNA from capsids and onset of viral DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
Cell lines were generated by cotransfection of Vero cells with pSV2neo and a plasmid containing the herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) EcoRI D fragment (coordinates 0.086 to 0.194). One such cell line (S22) contained the genes for alkaline exonuclease and several uncharacterized functions. Three mutant isolates of HSV-1 strain KOS which grew on S22 cells but not on normal Vero cells were isolated and characterized. All three mutants (hr27, hr48, and hr156) were defective in the synthesis of viral DNA and late proteins when grown in nonpermissive Vero cells. Early gene expression in cells infected with these host range mutants appeared to be normal at the nonpermissive condition. The mutations were mapped by marker rescue to a 1.5-kilobase fragment (coordinates 0.145 to 0.155). The mutation of one of these mutants, hr27, was more finely mapped to an 800-base-pair region (coordinates 0.145 to 0.151). This position of these mutations is consistent with the map location of a putative 94-kilodalton polypeptide as determined by sequence analysis (D. McGeoch, personal communication). Complementation studies demonstrated that these mutants formed a new complementation group, designated 1-36. The results presented in this report indicate that the 94-kilodalton gene product affected by these mutations may have a direct role in viral DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

5.
An insertional mutagen was developed which consists of the lacZ gene of Escherichia coli under the control of the regulatory elements of the large subunit of ribonucleotide reductase (ICP6). This ICP6::lacZ cassette was used to create a mutation in a gene designated UL52 (D. J. McGeoch, M. A. Dalrymple, A. Dolan, D. McNab, L. J. Perry, P. Taylor, and M. D. Challberg, J. Virol. 62:444-453, 1988), which is predicted to encode a 114,000-molecular-weight protein. To isolate and propagate this mutant, we generated a cell line, BL-1, by cotransfection of Vero cells with pSV2neo and a plasmid containing the herpes simplex virus type 1 KOS strain BamHI L fragment (coordinates 0.708 to 0.745). An ICP6::lacZ insertion mutant, hr114, was capable of growing in BL-1 cells but not in normal Vero cells. In addition, hr114 was defective in the synthesis of viral DNA and late proteins; however, this mutant appeared to exhibit normal early gene expression. Thus, the results presented in this report show that the UL52 gene product is required for viral DNA synthesis. Furthermore, our studies indicate that the ICP6::lacZ cassette will provide a useful tool for obtaining mutants of other herpes simplex virus genes.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
In this report, we describe some phenotypic properties of a temperature-sensitive mutant of herpes simplex type 1 (HSV-1) and present data concerning the physical location and nucleotide sequence of the genomic region harboring the mutation. The effect of shifts from the permissive to the nonpermissive temperature on infectious virus production by the mutant A44ts2 indicated that the mutated function is necessary throughout, or late in, the growth cycle. At the nonpermissive temperature, no major differences were detected in viral DNA or protein synthesis with respect to the parent A44ts+. On the other hand, electron microscopy of mutant-infected cells revealed that neither viral capsids nor capsid-related structures were assembled at the nonpermissive temperature. Additional analyses employing the Hirt extraction procedure showed that A44ts2 is also unable to mature replicated viral DNA into unit-length molecules under nonpermissive conditions. The results of marker rescue experiments with intact A44ts2 DNA and cloned restriction fragments of A44ts+ placed the lesion in the coordinate interval 0.553 to 0.565 (1,837 base pairs in region UL) of the HSV-1 physical map. No function has previously been assigned to this region, although it is known to be transcribed into two 5' coterminal mRNAs which code in vitro for a 54,000-molecular-weight polypeptide (K. P. Anderson, R. J. Frink, G. B. Devi, B. H. Gaylord, R. H. Costa, and E. K. Wagner, J. Virol. 37:1011-1027, 1981). We sequenced the interval 0.551 to 0.565 and found an open reading frame (ORF) for a 50,175-molecular-weight polypeptide. The predicted product of this ORF exhibits strong homology with the product of varicella-zoster virus ORF20 and lower, but significant, homology with the product of Epstein-Barr virus BORF1. For the three viruses, the corresponding ORFs lie just upstream of the gene coding for the large subunit of viral ribonucleotide reductase. The ORF described here corresponds to the ORF designated UL38 in the recently published nucleotide sequence of the HSV-1 UL region (D. J. McGeoch, M. A. Dalrymple, A. J. Davison, A. Dolan, M. C. Frame, D. McNab, L. J. Perry, J. E. Scott, and P. Taylor, J. Gen. Virol. 69:1531-1574, 1988).  相似文献   

8.
9.
10.
ts701 is a temperature-sensitive mutant of herpes simplex virus type 1 strain KOS induced by hydroxylamine mutagenesis (C.T. Chu, D. S. Parris, R. A. F. Dixon, F. E. Farber, and P. A. Schaffer, Virology 98:168-181, 1979). In the present study, the mutation rendering ts701 temperature sensitive was mapped to coordinates 0.609 through 0.614 in the UL region of the genome. At the nonpermissive temperature, ts701 (i) failed to induce the synthesis of viral DNA, (ii) exhibited a dramatically reduced ability to drive replication of a plasmid containing the herpes simplex virus origin of viral DNA synthesis, oriS, (iii) generated no viral polypeptides of the late (gamma 2) kinetic class, and (iv) produced virions with electron-translucent cores. Northern (RNA) blot hybridization demonstrated that two mRNAs--one of the beta kinetic class and one of the gamma kinetic class--hybridized to a 1.3-kilobase viral DNA fragment that rescued the mutation in ts701. Based on the phenotype and mapping of ts701, it is likely that its mutation lies in the gene specifying the 65,000-Mr DNA-binding protein (65KDBP) recently described by Marsden et al. (H.S. Marsden, M.E.M. Campbell, L. Haarr, M. C. Frame, D. S. Parris, M. Murphy, R. G. Hope, M. T. Muller, and C. M. Preston, J. Virol. 61:2428-2437, 1987).  相似文献   

11.
D Chen  E C Stabell    P D Olivo 《Journal of virology》1995,69(7):4515-4518
Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) gene 51 encodes a protein which is homologous to UL9, the origin of DNA replication-binding protein of herpes simplex virus type 1. No genetic information is available on VZV gene 51, but its product has been shown to bind to virtually the same recognition sequence as does UL9 (D. Chen and P. D. Olivo, J. Virol. 68:3841-3849, 1994; N. D. Stow, H. M. Weir, and E. C. Stow, Virology 177:570-577, 1990). We report here that gene 51 can complement a UL9 null mutant (hr94) (A. K. Malik, R. Martinez, L. Muncy, E. P. Carmichael, and S. K. Weller, Virology 190:702-715, 1992), but at a level which is only 20% of that of UL9. Quantitation of viral DNA synthesis suggests that this phenotype is due to a defect in viral DNA synthesis. Regardless, the ability of VZV gene 51 to complement UL9 suggests that alphaherpesviruses have a highly conserved mechanism of initiation of viral DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Previous studies (F. C. Purves, D. Spector, and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 65:5757-5764, 1991) have shown that the protein kinase encoded by the U(S)3 gene mediates posttranslational modification of a viral phosphoprotein with an apparent M(r) of 30,000 encoded by the UL34 gene. Here we report the following. (i) UL34 protein is not phosphorylated in cells infected with recombinant viruses deleted in the U(S)3 gene. (ii) Several new phosphoproteins (apparent M(r)s, 25,000 to 35,000) are present in cells infected with recombinant viruses deleted in the U(S)3 gene or with viruses carrying a mutation in the UL34 gene that precluded phosphorylation of the UL34 gene product by the U(S)3 protein kinase, but not in cells infected under conditions which permit phosphorylation of the UL34 protein. These proteins are genetically unrelated to the product of the UL34 gene. (iii) Polyclonal rabbit anti-UL34 protein serum precipitated not only the UL34 protein but also the other (25,000- to 35,000-M(r)) phosphoproteins from lysates of cells infected with U(S)3- virus. (iv) The UL34 gene product is a membrane protein inasmuch as the polyclonal anti-UL34 serum reacted with surfaces of intact, unfixed, infected cells and the antigen-antibody complex formed in this reaction contained the UL34 protein. (v) Small amounts of the UL34 protein were present in virions of infected cells. We conclude that the UL34 gene product is a membrane protein exclusively phosphorylated by the U(S)3 protein kinase which can either directly or indirectly form complexes with several other phosphoproteins. Experiments done thus far suggest that these phosphoproteins are present only under conditions in which the UL34 protein is not phosphorylated.  相似文献   

14.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 UL28 gene contains a 785-amino-acid open reading frame that codes for an essential protein. Studies with temperature-sensitive mutants which map to the UL28 gene indicate that the UL28 gene product (ICP18.5) is required for packaging of viral DNA and for expression of viral glycoproteins on the surface of infected cells (C. Addison, F. J. Rixon, and V. G. Preston, J. Gen. Virol. 71:2377-2384, 1990; B. A. Pancake, D. P. Aschman, and P. A. Schaffer, J. Virol. 47:568-585, 1983). In this study, we describe the isolation of two UL28 deletion mutants that were constructed and propagated in Vero cells transformed with the UL28 gene. The mutants, gCB and gC delta 7B, contained deletions of 1,881 and 537 bp, respectively, in the UL28 gene. Although the mutants synthesize viral DNA, they fail to form plaques or produce infectious virus in cells that do not express the UL28 gene. Transmission electron microscopy and Southern blot analysis demonstrated that both mutants are defective in cleavage and encapsidation of viral DNA. Analysis by cell surface immunofluorescence showed that the UL28 gene is not required for expression of viral glycoproteins on the surface of infected cells. A rabbit polyclonal antiserum was made against an Escherichia coli-expressed Cro-UL28 fusion protein. This antibody reacted with an infected-cell protein having an apparent molecular mass of 87 kDa. The 87-kDa protein was first detected at 6 h postinfection and was expressed as late as 24 h postinfection. No detectable UL28 protein was synthesized in gCB- or gC delta 7B-infected Vero cells.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Y F Zhang  B Moss 《Journal of virology》1991,65(11):6101-6110
A conditional lethal vaccinia virus mutant, which constitutively expresses the Escherichia coli lac repressor and has the lac operator controlling the F18R gene (the 18th open reading frame of the HindIII F fragment of the vaccinia virus strain WR genome) encoding an 11-kDa protein, was previously shown to be dependent on the inducer isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG) for replication (Y. Zhang and B. Moss, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 88:1511-1515, 1991). Further studies indicated that the yield of infectious virus could be regulated by titration with IPTG and that virus production was arrested by IPTG removal at appropriate times. Under nonpermissive conditions, an 11-kDa protein reactive with antiserum raised to a previously described DNA-binding phosphoprotein (S. Y. Kao and W. R. Bauer, Virology 159:399-407, 1987) was not synthesized, indicating that the latter is the product of the F18R gene. In the absence of IPTG, replication of viral DNA and the subsequent resolution of concatemeric DNA molecules appeared normal. Omission of IPTG did not alter the kinetics of early and late viral protein synthesis, although the absence of the 11-kDa polypeptide was noted by labeling infected cells with [35S]methionine or [32P]phosphate. Pulse-chase experiments revealed that proteolytic processing of the major viral structural proteins, P4a and P4b, was inhibited under nonpermissive conditions, suggesting a block in virus maturation. Without addition of IPTG, the failure of virus particle formation was indicated by sucrose gradient centrifugation of infected cell lysates and by the absence of vaccinia virus-mediated pH-dependent cell fusion. Electron microscopic examination of infected cells revealed that immature virus particles, with aberrant internal structures, accumulated when synthesis of the 11-kDa DNA-binding protein was prevented.  相似文献   

17.
The synthesis of bacteriophage G4 DNA was examined in temperature-sensitive dna mutants under permissive and nonpermissive conditions. The infecting single-stranded G4 DNA was converted to the parental replicative form (RF) at the nonpermissive temperature in infected cells containing a temperature sensitive mutation in the dnaA, dnaB, dnaC, dnaE, or dnaG gene. The presence of 30 mug of chloramphenicol or 200 mug of rifampin per ml had no effect on parental RF synthesis in these mutants. Replication of G4 double-stranded RF DNA occurred at a normal rate in dnaAts cells at the nonpermissive temperature, but the rate was greatly reduced in cells containing a temperature-sensitive mutation in the dnaB, dnaC, dnaE, or dnaG gene. RF DNA replicated at normal rates in revertants of these dna temperature-sensitive host cells. The simplest interpretation of these observations is that none of the dna gene products tested is essential for the synthesis of the complementary DNA strand on the infecting single-stranded G4 DNA, whereas the dnaB, dnaC, dnaE, (DNA polymerase III), and dnaG gene products are all essential for replication of the double-stranded G4 RF DNA. The alternate possibility that one or more of the gene products are actually essential for G4 parental RF synthesis, even though this synthesis is not defective in the mutant hosts, is also discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) UL15 gene is a spliced gene composed of two exons and is predicted to encode an 81-kDa protein of 735 amino acids (aa). Two UL15 gene products with molecular masses of 75 and 35 kDa have been observed (J. Baines, A. Poon, J. Rovnak, and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 68:8118-8124, 1994); however, it is not clear whether the smaller form represents a proteolytic cleavage product of the larger form or whether it is separately translated. In addition, an HSV-1 temperature-sensitive mutant in the UL15 gene (ts66.4) is defective in both cleavage of viral DNA concatemers into unit-length monomers and packaging of viral DNA into capsids (A. Poon and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 67:4497-4503, 1993; J. Baines et al., J. Virol. 68:8118-8124, 1994). In this study, we detected two UL15 gene products of 81 and 30 kDa in HSV-1-infected cells, using a polyclonal antibody raised against a maltose binding protein fusion construct containing UL15 exon 2. In addition, we report the isolation of two HSV-1 insertion mutants, hr81-1 and hr81-2, which contain an ICP6::lacZ insertion in UL15 exon 1 and exon 2 and thus would be predicted to encode C-terminally truncated peptides of 153 and 509 aa long, respectively. hr81-1 and hr81-2 are defective in DNA cleavage and packaging and accumulate only B capsids. However, both mutants are able to undergo wild-type levels of DNA replication and genomic inversion, suggesting that genomic inversion is a result of DNA replication rather than of DNA cleavage and packaging. We also provide evidence that the 81- and 30-kDa proteins are the products of separate in-frame translation events from the UL15 gene and that the 81-kDa full-length UL15 protein is required for DNA cleavage and packaging.  相似文献   

19.
Xu Y  Cei SA  Huete AR  Pari GS 《Journal of virology》2004,78(19):10360-10369
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) UL84 is required for oriLyt-dependent DNA replication, and evidence from transient transfection assays suggests that UL84 directly participates in DNA synthesis. In addition, because of its apparent interaction with IE2, UL84 is implicated as a possible regulatory protein. To address the role of UL84 in the context of the viral genome, we generated a recombinant HCMV bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) construct that did not express the UL84 gene product. This construct, BAC-IN84/Ep, displayed a null phenotype in that it failed to produce infectious virus after transfection into human fibroblast cells, whereas a revertant virus readily produced viral plaques and, subsequently, infectious virus. Real-time quantitative PCR showed that BAC-IN84/Ep was defective for DNA synthesis in that no increase in the accumulation of viral DNA was observed in transfected cells. We were unable to complement BAC-IN84/Ep in trans; however, oriLyt-dependent DNA replication was observed by the cotransfection of UL84 and BAC-IN84/Ep. An analysis of viral mRNA by real-time PCR indicated that, even in the absence of DNA synthesis, all representative kinetic classes of genes were expressed in cells transfected with BAC-IN84/Ep. The detection of UL44 and IE2 by immunofluorescence in BAC-IN84/Ep-transfected cells showed that these proteins failed to partition into replication compartments, indicating that UL84 expression is essential for the formation of these proteins into replication centers within the context of the viral genome. These results show that UL84 provides an essential DNA replication function and influences the subcellular localization of other viral proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Herpes Simplex Virus DNA Packaging without Measurable DNA Synthesis   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
Herpes simplex virus (HSV) type 1 DNA synthesis and packaging occur within the nuclei of infected cells; however, the extent to which the two processes are coupled remains unclear. Correct packaging is thought to be dependent upon DNA debranching or other repair processes, and such events commonly involve new DNA synthesis. Furthermore, the HSV UL15 gene product, essential for packaging, nevertheless localizes to sites of active DNA replication and may link the two events. It has previously been difficult to determine whether packaging requires concomitant DNA synthesis due to the complexity of these processes and of the viral life cycle; however, we have recently described a model system which simplifies the study of HSV assembly. Cells infected with HSV strain tsProt.A accumulate unpackaged capsids at the nonpermissive temperature of 39°C. Following release of the temperature block, these capsids proceed to package viral DNA in a single, synchronous wave. Here we report that, when DNA replication was inhibited prior to release of the temperature block, DNA packaging and later events in viral assembly nevertheless occurred at near-normal levels. We conclude that, under our conditions, HSV DNA packaging does not require detectable levels of DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

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