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The major herpes simplex virus DNA-binding protein, ICP8, was purified from cells infected with the herpes simplex virus type 1 temperature-sensitive strain tsHA1. tsHA1 ICP8 bound single-stranded DNA in filter binding assays carried out at room temperature and exhibited nonrandom binding to single-stranded bacteriophage fd DNA circles as determined by electron microscopy. The filter binding assay results and the apparent nucleotide spacing of the DNA complexed with protein were identical, within experimental error, to those observed with wild-type ICP8. Thermal inactivation assays, however, showed that the DNA-binding activity of tsHA1 ICP8 was 50% inactivated at approximately 39 degrees C as compared with 45 degrees C for the wild-type protein. Both wild-type and tsHA1 ICP8 were capable of stimulating viral DNA polymerase activity at permissive temperatures. The stimulatory effect of both proteins was lost at 39 degrees C.  相似文献   

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The herpes simplex type 1 (HSV-1) origin binding protein, the UL9 protein, exists in solution as a homodimer of 94-kDa monomers. It binds to Box I, the high affinity element of the HSV-1 origin, Oris, as a dimer. The UL9 protein also binds the HSV-1 single strand DNA-binding protein, ICP8. Photocross-linking studies have shown that although the UL9 protein binds Box I as a dimer, only one of the two monomers contacts Box I. It is this form of the UL9 homodimer that upon interaction with ICP8, promotes the unwinding of Box I coupled to the hydrolysis of ATP to ADP and Pi. Photocross-linking studies have also shown that the amount of UL9 protein that interacts with Box I is reduced by its interaction with ICP8. Antibody directed against the C-terminal ten amino acids of the UL9 protein inhibits its Box I unwinding activity, consistent with the requirement for interaction of the C terminus of the UL9 protein with ICP8. Inhibition by the antibody is enhanced when the UL9 protein is first bound to Box I, suggesting that the C terminus of the UL9 protein undergoes a conformational change upon binding Box I.  相似文献   

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We performed live cell visualization assays to directly assess the interaction between competing adeno-associated virus (AAV) and herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) DNA replication. Our studies reveal the formation of separate AAV and HSV-1 replication compartments and the inhibition of HSV-1 replication compartment formation in the presence of AAV. AAV Rep is recruited into AAV replication compartments but not into those of HSV-1, while the single-stranded DNA-binding protein HSV-1 ICP8 is recruited into both AAV and HSV-1 replication compartments, although with differential staining patterns. Slot blot analysis of coinfected cells revealed a dose-dependent inhibition of HSV-1 DNA replication by wild-type AAV but not by rep-negative recombinant AAV. Consistent with this, Western blot analysis indicated that wild-type AAV affects the levels of the HSV-1 immediate-early protein ICP4 and the early protein ICP8 only modestly but strongly inhibits the accumulation of the late proteins VP16 and gC. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the presence of Rep in the absence of AAV DNA replication is sufficient for the inhibition of HSV-1. In particular, Rep68/78 proteins severely inhibit the formation of mature HSV-1 replication compartments and lead to the accumulation of ICP8 at sites of cellular DNA synthesis, a phenomenon previously observed in the presence of viral polymerase inhibitors. Taken together, our results suggest that AAV and HSV-1 replicate in separate compartments and that AAV Rep inhibits HSV-1 at the level of DNA replication.  相似文献   

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A stable DNA polymerase (EC 2.7.7.7) has been purified from the extremely thermophilic eubacterium Thermotoga sp. strain FjSS3-B.1 by a five-step purification procedure. First, the crude extract was treated with polyethylenimine to precipitate nucleic acids. The endonuclease activity coprecipitated. DEAE-Sepharose, CM-Sephrarose, and hydroxylapatite column chromatography were used to purify the preparation. As a final step on a small scale, preparative sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was used. The purified DNA polymerase exhibited a molecular weight of 85,000, as determined by both SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and size-exclusion chromatography. Its pH optimum was in the range pH 7.5-8. When assayed over the temperature range 30-80 degrees C, the maximum activity in a 30-min assay was at 80 degrees C. The enzyme was moderately thermostable and exhibited half-lives of 3 min at 95 degrees C and 60 min at 50 degrees C in the absence of substrate. Several additives such as Triton X-100 enhanced thermostability. During storage at 4 degrees C and -70 degrees C, the stability of the enzyme was improved by the addition of gelatin.  相似文献   

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The replication of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) DNA is associated with a high degree of homologous recombination. While cellular enzymes may take part in mediating this recombination, we present evidence for an HSV-1-encoded recombinase activity. HSV-1 alkaline nuclease, encoded by the UL12 gene, is a 5'-->3' exonuclease that shares homology with Redalpha, commonly known as lambda exonuclease, an exonuclease required for homologous recombination by bacteriophage lambda. The HSV-1 single-stranded DNA binding protein ICP8 is an essential protein for HSV DNA replication and possesses single-stranded DNA annealing activities like the Redbeta synaptase component of the phage lambda recombinase. Here we show that UL12 and ICP8 work together to effect strand exchange much like the Red system of lambda. Purified UL12 protein and ICP8 mediated the complete exchange between a 7.25-kb M13mp18 linear double-stranded DNA molecule and circular single-stranded M13 DNA, forming a gapped circle and a displaced strand as final products. The optimal conditions for strand exchange were 1 mM MgCl(2), 40 mM NaCl, and pH 7.5. Stoichiometric amounts of ICP8 were required, and strand exchange did not depend on the nature of the double-stranded end. Nuclease-defective UL12 could not support this reaction. These data suggest that diverse DNA viruses appear to utilize an evolutionarily conserved recombination mechanism.  相似文献   

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The binding of mitoxantrone with double-helical nucleic acids was investigated by the methods of isothermal microcalorimetry, circular dichroism and absorption at the ionic strength mu = 0.11 and 0.011 M NaCl at temperature region of 30 divided by 60 degrees C. The investigation shows, that at mu = 0.11 M NaCl mitoxantrone interacts with double-helical nucleic acids in one way only. For such conditions using spectrophotometric titration data Scatchard plots for the binding of mitoxantrone with double-helical nucleic acids were constructed. The calculations show that the saturation stoichiometry is one mitoxantrone molecule per 2 divided by 3 base pairs DNA and 6 divided by 8 base pairs RNA. The dependence of binding constant from GC-content is observed. It is shown that the binding enthalpy of mitoxantrone with DNA and RNA increases linearly and reaches -(3.0 +/- 0.5) kkal per 1 mol mitoxantrone. It is shown that a binding mitoxantrone with double-helical nucleic acids, besides the intercalation of rings, a determinate contribution in the binding is given also by electrostatic interaction of side chains mitoxantrone with nucleic acids.  相似文献   

10.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) alkaline nuclease, encoded by the UL12 gene, plays an important role in HSV-1 replication, as a UL12 null mutant displays a severe growth defect. The HSV-1 alkaline exonuclease UL12 interacts with the viral single-stranded DNA binding protein ICP8 and promotes strand exchange in vitro in conjunction with ICP8. We proposed that UL12 and ICP8 form a two-subunit recombinase reminiscent of the phage lambda Red α/β recombination system and that the viral and cellular recombinases contribute to viral genome replication through a homologous recombination-dependent DNA replication mechanism. To test this hypothesis, we identified cellular interaction partners of UL12 by using coimmunoprecipitation. We report for the first time a specific interaction between UL12 and components of the cellular MRN complex, an important factor in the ATM-mediated homologous recombination repair (HRR) pathway. This interaction is detected early during infection and does not require viral DNA or other viral or cellular proteins. The region of UL12 responsible for the interaction has been mapped to the first 125 residues, and coimmunoprecipitation can be abolished by deletion of residues 100 to 126. These observations support the hypothesis that cellular and viral recombination factors work together to promote efficient HSV-1 growth.  相似文献   

11.
The herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) UL42 protein, one of seven herpes-encoded polypeptides that are required for the replication of the HSV-1 genome, is found in a 1:1 complex with the HSV-1 DNA polymerase (Crute, J. J., and Lehman, I. R. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 19266-19270). To obtain herpes DNA polymerase free of UL42 protein, we have cloned and overexpressed the Pol gene in a recombinant baculovirus vector and purified the recombinant DNA polymerase to near homogeneity. Replication of singly primed M13mp18 single-stranded DNA by the recombinant enzyme in the presence of the herpes encoded single-stranded DNA-binding protein ICP8 yields in addition to some full-length product a distribution of intermediate length products by a quasi-processive mode of deoxynucleotide polymerization. Addition of the purified UL42 protein results in completely processive polymerization and the generation of full-length products. Similar processivity is observed with the HSV-1 DNA polymerase purified from herpes-infected Vero cells. Processive DNA replication by the DNA polymerase isolated from HSV-1-infected Vero cells or the recombinant DNA polymerase-UL42 protein complex requires that the single-stranded DNA be coated with saturating levels of ICP8. ICP8 which binds single-stranded DNA in a highly cooperative manner is presumably required to melt out regions of secondary structure in the single-stranded DNA template, thereby potentiating the processivity enhancing action of the UL42 protein.  相似文献   

12.
Trego KS  Parris DS 《Journal of virology》2003,77(23):12646-12659
The origin (ori)-binding protein of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), encoded by the UL9 open reading frame, has been shown to physically interact with a number of cellular and viral proteins, including three HSV-1 proteins (ICP8, UL42, and UL8) essential for ori-dependent DNA replication. In this report, it is demonstrated for the first time that the DNA polymerase processivity factor, UL42 protein, provides accessory function to the UL9 protein by enhancing the 3'-to-5' helicase activity of UL9 on partially duplex nonspecific DNA substrates. UL42 fails to enhance the unwinding activity of a noncognate helicase, suggesting that enhancement of unwinding requires the physical interaction between UL42 and UL9. UL42 increases the steady-state rate for unwinding a 23/38-mer by UL9, but only at limiting UL9 concentrations, consistent with a role in increasing the affinity of UL9 for DNA. Optimum enhancement of unwinding was observed at UL42/UL9 molecular ratios of 4:1, although enhancement was reduced when high UL42/DNA ratios were present. Under the assay conditions employed, UL42 did not alter the rate constant for dissociation of UL9 from the DNA substrate. UL42 also did not significantly reduce the lag period which was observed following the addition of UL9 to DNA, regardless of whether UL42 was added to DNA prior to or at the same time as UL9. Moreover, addition of UL42 to ongoing unwinding reactions increased the steady-state rate for unwinding, but only after a 10- to 15-min lag period. Thus, the increased affinity of UL9 for DNA most likely is the result of an increase in the rate constant for binding of UL9 to DNA, and it explains why helicase enhancement is observed only at subsaturating concentrations of UL9 with respect to DNA. In contrast, ICP8 enhances unwinding at both saturating and subsaturating UL9 concentrations and reduces or eliminates the lag period. The different means by which ICP8 and UL42 enhance the ability of UL9 to unwind DNA suggest that these two members of the presumed functional replisome may act synergistically on UL9 to effect initiation of HSV-1 DNA replication in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
The interaction between avian myeloblastosis virus DNA polymerase and synthetic nucleic acids was studied by an adaptation of the membrane filter binding technique. Bacillus subtilis DNA was used as a substrate for the binding reaction and was retained on the filters in the presence of the viral polymerase. The polymerase activity was demonstrated to be retained on the filter in either the presence or absence of the bacterial DNA. Characterization of the polymerase-DNA interaction demonstrated a marked similarity to previous data regarding the binding of Escherichia coli DNA-dependent RNA polymerase to nucleic acids when studied using related techniques. In contrast, the association between methylated bovine serum albumin and the B. subtilis DNA was found to differ significantly in both reaction stoichiometry and stability. Synthetic polynucleotides were shown to inhibit the binding of the bacterial DNA to the viral DNA polymerase and poly 2′-fluoro-2′-deoxyuridylic acid was found to be the most potent inhibitor of this reaction. Results from the binding-inhibition studies correlated well with studies concerning the inhibition of enzyme activity and it is concluded that the inhibitory polynucleotides act by interfering with binding of nucleic acid template to the viral enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Single-pulse (approximately 8 ns) ultraviolet laser excitation of protein-nucleic acid complexes can result in efficient and rapid covalent cross-linking of proteins to nucleic acids. The reaction produces no nucleic acid-nucleic acid or protein-protein cross-links, and no nucleic acid degradation. The efficiency of cross-linking is dependent on the wavelength of the exciting radiation, on the nucleotide composition of the nucleic acid, and on the total photon flux. The yield of cross-links/laser pulse is largest between 245 and 280 nm; cross-links are obtained with far UV photons (200-240 nm) as well, but in this range appreciable protein degradation is also observed. The method has been calibrated using the phage T4-coded gene 32 (single-stranded DNA-binding) protein interaction with oligonucleotides, for which binding constants have been measured previously by standard physical chemical methods (Kowalczykowski, S. C., Lonberg, N., Newport, J. W., and von Hippel, P. H. (1981) J. Mol. Biol. 145, 75-104). Photoactivation occurs primarily through the nucleotide residues of DNA and RNA at excitation wavelengths greater than 245 nm, with reaction through thymidine being greatly favored. The nucleotide residues may be ranked in order of decreasing photoreactivity as: dT much greater than dC greater than rU greater than rC, dA, dG. Cross-linking appears to be a single-photon process and occurs through single nucleotide (dT) residues; pyrimidine dimer formation is not involved. Preliminary studies of the individual proteins of the five-protein T4 DNA replication complex show that gene 43 protein (polymerase), gene 32 protein, and gene 44 and 45 (polymerase accessory) proteins all make contact with DNA, and can be cross-linked to it, whereas gene 62 (polymerase accessory) protein cannot. A survey of other nucleic acid-binding proteins has shown that E. coli RNA polymerase, DNA polymerase I, and rho protein can all be cross-linked to various nucleic acids by the laser technique. The potential uses of this procedure in probing protein-nucleic acid interactions are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Modification of the herpes simplex virus type 1 major DNA-binding protein (ICP8) with reagents and conditions specific for arginine, lysine, and tyrosine residues indicates that surface lysine and tyrosine residues are required for the interaction of this protein with single-stranded DNA. Modification of either of these two amino acids resulted in a loss and/or modification of binding activity as judged by nitrocellulose filter assays and gel shift. Modification specific for arginine residues did not affect binding within the limits of the assays used. Finally, quenching of the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of ICP8 in the presence of single-stranded DNA either suggests involvement of this amino acid in the binding reaction or reflects a conformational change in the protein upon binding.  相似文献   

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The binding of the recombinant proteinase inhibitor eglin c from the leech Hirudo medicinalis to serine (pro)enzymes belonging to the chymotrypsin and subtilisin families has been investigated from the thermodynamic viewpoint, between pH 4.5 and 9.5 and from 10 degrees C to 40 degrees C. The affinity of eglin c for the serine (pro)enzymes considered shows the following trend: Leu-proteinase [the leucine specific serine proteinase from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaves] greater than human leucocyte elastase congruent to human cathepsin G congruent to subtilisin Carlsberg congruent to bovine alpha-chymotrypsin greater than bovine alpha-chymotrypsinogen A congruent to porcine pancreatic elastase congruent to bovine beta-trypsin. The serine (pro)enzyme-inhibitor complex formation is an entropy-driven process. On increasing the pH from 4.5 to 9.5, the affinity of eglin c for the serine (pro)enzymes considered increases thus reflecting the acid pK shift of the invariant hystidyl catalytic residue from approximately to 6.9 in the free serine proteinases and bovine alpha-chymotrypsinogen A to congruent to 5.1 in the serine (pro)enzyme-inhibitor complexes. Considering the known molecular models, the observed binding behaviour of eglin c was related to the inferred stereochemistry of the serine (pro)enzyme-inhibitor contact regions.  相似文献   

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The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) UL8 DNA replication protein is a component of a trimeric helicase-primase complex. Sixteen UL8-specific monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) were isolated and characterized. In initial immunoprecipitation experiments, one of these, MAb 804, was shown to coprecipitate POL, the catalytic subunit of the HSV-1 DNA polymerase, from extracts of insect cells infected with recombinant baculoviruses expressing the POL and UL8 proteins. Coprecipitation of POL was dependent on the presence of UL8 protein. Rapid enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs), in which one protein was bound to microtiter wells and binding of the other protein was detected with a UL8- or POL-specific MAb, were developed to investigate further the interaction between the two proteins. When tested in the ELISAs, five of the UL8-specific MAbs consistently inhibited the interaction, raising the possibility that these antibodies act by binding to epitopes at or near a site(s) on UL8 involved in its interaction with POL. The epitopes recognized by four of the inhibitory MAbs were approximately located by using a series of truncated UL8 proteins expressed in mammalian cells. Three of these MAbs recognized an epitope near the C terminus of UL8, which was subjected to fine mapping with a series of overlapping peptides. The C-terminal peptides were then tested in the ELISA for their ability to inhibit the POL-UL8 interaction: the most potent exhibited a 50% inhibitory concentration of approximately 5 microM. Our findings suggest that the UL8 protein may be involved in recruiting HSV-1 DNA polymerase into the viral DNA replication complex and also identify a potential new target for antiviral therapy.  相似文献   

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