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1.
The biochemical characteristics of complex formation in nuclear extracts from mock-infected and herpes simplex virus (HSV)-infected Vero and HeLa cells with a sequence downstream of and adjacent to the promoter for the HSV thymidine kinase gene were studied using the mobility shift electrophoresis assay. This region is bound by host cell proteins, as evidenced by the formation of complexes after incubation in extracts from mock-infected cells. Unique virus-specific complexes form in extracts prepared from infected cells, and these complexes contain ICP4, the major regulatory protein of HSV. Examination of the salt requirements for assembly and the stability of preformed DNA-protein complexes to added salt demonstrate the distinct nature of the complexes that form in each extract. This finding is supported by analyses of the relative association and dissociation rates of these complexes which show that complexes formed in extracts prepared from infected cells are kinetically labile. After depletion with chelators, the divalent cation requirements for complex formation were assayed by supplementation with various metal salts. Addition of Mn2+ restored binding activity in extracts from both mock-infected and infected HeLa cells. Finally, footprinting assays revealed that sequences on each strand throughout this region of the thymidine kinase gene were involved in complex formation only in extracts from mock-infected cells. These experiments suggest that one consequence of virus gene expression is to alter the interaction of cell proteins with virus DNA.  相似文献   

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The virion host shutoff (vhs) gene of herpes simplex virus encodes a virion polypeptide that induces degradation of host mRNAs at early times and rapid turnover of viral mRNAs throughout infection. To better investigate the vhs function, an in vitro mRNA degradation system was developed, consisting of cytoplasmic extracts from HeLa cells infected with wild-type herpes simplex virus type 1 or a mutant encoding a defective vhs polypeptide. Host and viral mRNAs were degraded rapidly in extracts from cells productively infected with wild-type herpes simplex virus type 1 but not in extracts from mock-infected cells or cells infected with the mutant vhs1. In contrast, 28S rRNA was stable in all three kinds of extract. Accelerated turnover of host mRNAs was also observed in extracts from cells infected with wild-type virus in the presence of dactinomycin, indicating that the activity was induced by a structural component of the infecting virions. The in vitro vhs activity was inactivated by heat or proteinase K digestion but was insensitive to brief treatment of the extracts with micrococcal nuclease. It was not inhibited by placental RNase inhibitor, it exhibited a strong dependence upon added Mg2+, it was active at concentrations of K+ up to 200 mM, and it did not require the components of an energy-generating system. In summary, the in vitro mRNA degradation system appears to accurately reproduce the vhs-mediated decay of host and viral mRNAs and should be useful for studies of the mechanism of vhs action.  相似文献   

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The herpes simplex virus (HSV) virion host shutoff (Vhs) protein is an endoribonuclease that accelerates decay of many host and viral mRNAs. Purified Vhs does not distinguish mRNAs from nonmessenger RNAs and cuts target RNAs at many sites, yet within infected cells it is targeted to mRNAs and cleaves those mRNAs at preferred sites including, for some, regions of translation initiation. This targeting may result in part from Vhs binding to the translation initiation factor eIF4H; in particular, several mutations in Vhs that abrogate its binding to eIF4H also abolish its mRNA-degradative activity, even though the mutant proteins retain endonuclease activity. To further investigate the role of eIF4H in Vhs activity, HeLa cells were depleted of eIF4H or other proteins by transfection with small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) 48 h prior to infection or mock infection in the presence of actinomycin D. Cellular mRNA levels were then assayed 5 h after infection. In cells transfected with an siRNA for the housekeeping enzyme glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, wild-type HSV infection reduced beta-actin mRNA levels to between 20 and 30% of those in mock-infected cells, indicative of a normal Vhs activity. In contrast, in cells transfected with any of three eIF4H siRNAs, beta-actin mRNA levels were indistinguishable in infected and mock-infected cells, suggesting that eIF4H depletion impeded Vhs-mediated degradation. Depletion of the related factor eIF4B did not affect Vhs activity. The data suggest that eIF4H binding is required for Vhs-induced degradation of many mRNAs, perhaps by targeting Vhs to mRNAs and to preferred sites within mRNAs.  相似文献   

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Earlier reports have described a novel protein kinase in cells infected with herpes simplex or pseudorabies viruses. These novel enzymes were characterized by their acceptance of protamine as a substrate and by their differential chromatographic behavior in anion-exchange chromatography. We report that this activity was not present in extracts of uninfected cells or of cells infected with a mutant constructed so as to contain a deletion in the US3 open reading frame mapping in the small component of herpes simplex virus 1 DNA. The activity was present in extracts of cells infected with wild-type virus and with a recombinant in which the US3 open reading frame had been rescued. Our results are consistent with the observation reported earlier that the coding sequences predict an amino acid motif common to protein kinases and lead to the conclusion that the US3 open reading frame encodes a virus-specific protein kinase that is not required for virus growth in cells in culture.  相似文献   

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The freeze-fracture technique, which produced high-resolution replicas of large internal faces of membranes, was used for an ultrastructural study of the nuclei of herpes simplex virus-infected BHK-21 cells and mock-infected controls. Crystalline arrays of viral nucleocapsids were found in the nucleoplasm of infected cells, and numerous nuclear membrane "blebs" and protrusions were observed. The numerous areas of membrane distortions were not found to contain nuclear pores. In addition, specific areas of normal protein intramembranous particles are deleted from certain areas of the nuclear membrane as a result of herpes simplex virus, type 2, infection.  相似文献   

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HeLa BU cells infected with either the type 1 or the type 2 forms of herpes simplex virus show an increase in the activities of uracil-DNA glycosylase and dUTP nucleotidohydrolase. Under optimal conditions, uracil-DNA glycosylase activity increases approximately 40-fold in HSV type 2-infected cells. In herpes simplex virus (HSV) type 1-infected cells, uracil-DNA glycosylase activity increases only 6-fold. At a KCl concentration of 100 mM, uracil-DNA glycosylase derived from HSV type 2-infected cells is activated 2-fold, while the glycosylase extracted from mock infected HeLa BU cells is inhibited almost 90% at 100 mM KCl. dUTP nucleotidohydrolase activity increases 4-fold and 3-fold, respectively, in HSV type 1- and HSV type 2-infected HeLa BU cells. Nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of extracts derived from the type 1- and type 2-infected cells indicates distinct electrophoretic mobilities from the host cell enzyme. dUTP nucleotidohydrolase RF values for the mock infected cells, HSV type 1, and HSV type 2 are 0.5, 0.25, and 0.33, respectively. Serum from rabbits immunized against cells infected with herpes simplex virus type 1 or type 2 specifically neutralizes the dUTPase and uracil-DNA glycosylase activities extracted from herpes simplex virus-infected cells. This serum does not neutralize dUTPase or uracil-DNA glycosylase activity derived from mock infected cells.  相似文献   

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The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) origin of replication, oriS, contains three highly homologous sequences, sites I, II, and III. The HSV-1 origin-binding protein (OBP), the product of the UL9 gene, has been shown to bind specifically to sites I and II. In this study, gel shift analysis was used to characterize interactions between site I DNA and proteins in infected and uninfected cell extracts. The formation of two protein-DNA complexes, bands A and B, was demonstrated with infected cell extracts, and one predominant protein-DNA complex, band M, was identified with mock-infected extracts. Protein interactions with the highly homologous site II and III DNAs were also characterized. Incubation of infected cell extracts with the lower-affinity site II DNA as a probe resulted in the appearance of two protein-DNA complexes with mobilities identical to those of the A and B complexes, while incubation with site III DNA resulted in the formation of a single complex with the mobility of band B; no A-like band was observed. Incubation of high concentrations of partially purified OBP with site I DNA resulted in the formation of two novel complexes, bands 9-1 and 9-2. Addition of uninfected or HSV-1-infected cell extracts to the purified OBP-site I DNA mix significantly enhanced the formation of complex 9-1. The enhanced formation of complex 9-1 by uninfected cell extracts implicates a cellular factor or factors in the formation or stabilization of the OBP-site I DNA complex.  相似文献   

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T Ogino  T Otsuka    M Takahashi 《Journal of virology》1977,21(3):1232-1235
Deoxypyrimidine kinase (deoxythymidine [TdR] kinase and deoxycytidine kinase) activity was induced in human embryonic lung cells after infection with varicella-zoster virus (VZ virus). Increased enzyme activity was also produced by using cell-associated virus as inoculum instead of cell-free virus. Anti-VZ virus serum inhibited both the appearance of cytopathic effect and the induction of enzyme activity. The induced TdR kinase activity was more thermostable than that induced by herpes simplex virus type 1. Also, the TdR kinase activity of VZ virus-infected cells was inhibited by dTTP less than in mock-infected cells and more than in herpes simplex virus type 1-infected cells.  相似文献   

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Endogenous host topoisomerase II acts upon herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) DNA in infected cells (S.N. Ebert, S.S. Shtrom, and M.T. Muller, J. Virol. 56:4059-4066, 1990), and cleavage is directed exclusively at progeny viral DNA while parental DNA is resistant. To evaluate the possibility that HSV-1 induces topoisomerase II activity which could account for the preferential cleavage of progeny viral DNA, we assessed topoisomerase II cleavage activity on cellular and viral DNA substrates before and after the initiation of viral DNA replication. We show that cleavage of a host gene in mock-infected cells was similar to that observed in HSV-1-infected cells, regardless of whether viral DNA replication had occurred. In addition, quantitative measurements revealed comparable amounts of topoisomerase II activity in infected and mock-infected cells; thus, HSV-1 neither induces nor encodes its own type II topoisomerase and cleavages in vivo are due to a preexisting host topoisomerase. Human cells contain two isozymes of topoisomerase II (p170 and p180), encoded by separate genes. Through the use of isozyme-specific antibodies, we demonstrate that only p170 was found to be cross-linked to HSV-1 DNA even though both forms were present at nearly constant levels in HSV-1-infected cells. Immunofluorescence revealed that by 6 h postinfection, p170 becomes redistributed and localized to sites of active viral DNA synthesis. The data suggest that p170 gains preferential access to replicated viral DNA molecules, which explains why topoisomerase II activity is concentrated on progeny DNA.  相似文献   

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The heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein C1 and C2 proteins were preferentially cross-linked by treatment with UV light in nuclear extracts to RNAs containing six different polyadenylation signals. The domain required for the interaction was located downstream of the poly(A) cleavage site, since deletion of this segment from several polyadenylation substrate RNAs greatly reduced cross-linking efficiency. In addition, RNAs containing only downstream sequences were efficiently cross-linked to C proteins, while fully processed, polyadenylated RNAs were not. Analysis of mutated variants of the simian virus 40 late polyadenylation signal showed that uridylate-rich sequences located in the region between 30 and 55 nucleotides downstream of the cleavage site were required for efficient cross-linking of C proteins. This downstream domain of the simian virus 40 late poly(A) addition signal has been shown to influence the efficiency of the polyadenylation reaction. However, there was not a strict correlation between cross-linking of C proteins and the efficiency of polyadenylation.  相似文献   

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In this report we confirm and further characterize the induction of a novel ribonucleotide reductase after herpes simplex virus infection of mammalian cells. Induction of the enzyme was observed at a multiplicity of infection of 1 PFU/cell or greater and was found to be maximal (three- to sixfold the activity in mock-infected controls at 6 to 8 h postinfection at a multiplicity of infection of 10 PFU/cell. Partial purification and subsequent characterization of the reductase activity from infected cells demonstrated the existence of two enzymes which could be separated by precipitation with ammonium sulfate. One of the activities precipitated at between 35 and 55% salt saturation, as did the enzyme from control cells, whereas the novel activity precipitated at 0 to 35% saturation. This latter enzyme was similar to the herpes simplex virus-induced reductase described by others in its lack of requirement for Mg2 and its resistance to inhibition by dTTP and dATP; in addition, we found that it was inhibited by ATP, whereas the enzyme from control cells displayed an absolute requirement for the nucleotide. Both enzymes were equally inhibited by pyridoxal phosphate and showed similar cold and heat stability. The enzyme induced by herpes simplex virus infection, however, was much more labile than the control enzyme upon purification.  相似文献   

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Interaction of concanavalin A with herpes simplex virus infected cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Incubation of herpes simplex virus (HSV) infected cells with concanavalin A (Con A) interferes with binding of the Fc portion of antibody. In addition, the lectin inhibits complement mediated cytolysis, probably by interference with antibody binding. These results suggest that binding sites of both Fc and HSV antibody contain residues which attract Con A.  相似文献   

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