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1.
Autoradiographic analyses of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) synthesis in randomly growing KB cell cultures infected with equine abortion virus (EAV) suggested that viral DNA synthesis was initiated only at times that coincided with the entry of noninfected control cells into the S phase of the cell cycle. Synchronized cultures of KB cells were infected at different stages of the cell cycle, and rates of synthesis of cellular and viral DNA were measured. When cells were infected at different times within the S phase, viral DNA synthesis was initiated 2 to 3 hr after infection. However, when cells in G1 and G2 were infected, the initiation of viral DNA synthesis was delayed and occurred only at times corresponding to the S phase. The times when viral DNA synthesis began were independent of the time of infection and differed by as much as 5 hr, depending on the stage of the cell cycle at which cells were infected. Viral one-step growth curves were also related to the S phase in a manner which indicated a relationship between the initiation of viral DNA synthesis and the S phase. These data support the concept that initiation of EAV DNA synthesis is dependent upon some cellular function(s) which is related to the S phase of the cell cycle.  相似文献   

2.
Infection of quiescent CV-1 cells with simian virus 40 mutant tsA30 at 37 degrees C resulted in the induction of two rounds of cellular DNA synthesis in T-antigen-positive cells, as previously described for wild-type simian virus 40. Following infection with tsA30 at 40.5 degrees C, T-antigen-positive cells were induced into S phase and reached a diploid G2 DNA content; however, a second S phase was not initiated. The failure of tsA30-infected CV-1 cells to enter tetraploid S phase at 40.5 degrees C identifies a T-antigen function, distinct from T-antigen functions responsible for stimulation of cell DNA synthesis, which is required for initiation of a second round of DNA synthesis without mitosis.  相似文献   

3.
Quantitative two-color fluorescent analysis of Simian virus (SV40) infection of permissive CV-1 cells was investigated. Analysis included by quantitation of cellular DNA, the early viral tumor (T) antigen with a monoclonal antibody, and late viral (V) antigens with a polyclonal antibody. T antigen was detected in all phases of the cell cycle at 6 and 12 h, after SV40 infection of growth arrested cells. At later time intervals, the percentage of T-antigen-positive cells increased with the induction of the cells into successive rounds of DNA synthesis and an increase in tetraploid-polyploid cells. The amount of T antigen per cell increased as the cells entered the successive stages of the cell cycle (G0/G1----G2 + M----tetraploid S and G2 + M). The V antigen from adsorbed virus was detected immediately after infection. Synthesis of V antigen began in late S and G2 + M phases of the cell cycle. This quantitative analysis allows a definitive determination of antigen per cell in a population correlated with the cell cycle and may be useful in correlating viral and cellular events with transformation.  相似文献   

4.
The kinetics of host cellular DNA stimulation by simian virus 40 (SV40) tsA58 infection was studied by flow microfluorometry and autoradiography in two types of productively infected monkey kidney cells (AGMK, secondary passage, and the TC-7 cell line). Prior to infection, the cell populations were maintained predominantly in G0-G1 hase of the cell cycle by low (0.25%) serum concentration. Infection of TC-7 or AGMK cells by wild-type SV40, viable deletion mutant dl890, or by SV40 tsA58 at 33 degrees C induced cells through S phase after which they were blocked with a 4N DNA content in the G2 phase. The infection of TC-7 cells by tsA58 at 41 degrees C, which was a nonpermissive temperature for viral DNA replication, induced a round of cell DNA synthesis in approximately 30% of the cell population. These cells proceeded through S phase but then re-entered the G1 resting state. In contrast, infection of AGMK cells by tsA58 at 41 degrees C induced DNA synthesis in approximately 50% of the cells, but this population remained blocked in the G2 phase. These results indicate that the mitogenic effect of the A gene product upon cellular DNA is more heat resistant than its regulating activity on viral DNA synthesis and that the extent of induction of cell DNA synthesis by the A gene product may be influenced by the host cell.  相似文献   

5.
Both exponentially growing and serum-arrested subcloned CV-1 cell cultures were infected with simian virus 40 (SV40). By 24 h after infection 96% of the nuclei of these permissive cells contained SV40 T-antigen. Analysis of the average DNA content per cell at various times after infection indicated that by 24 h most of the cells contained amounts of DNA similar to those normally found in G(2) cells. Analysis of cell cycle distributions indicated that a G(2) DNA complement was maintained by over 90% of the cells in the infected populations 24 to 48 h postinfection. Cells continued to synthesize SV40 DNA during the first 50 h after infection, and cytopathic effect was first observed 60 h after inoculation. After infection the number of mitotic cells that could be recovered by selective detachment decreased precipitously and was drastically reduced by 24 h. A study of the kinetics of decline in the number of mitotic cells suggests that this decline is related to an event during the cell cycle at or near the G(1)-S-phase border upon which commencement of SV40 DNA replication apparently depends. It was concluded that after SV40 infection, stationary cells are induced to cycle, and cycling cells complete one round of cellular DNA synthesis but do not divide. Although the infected cells continue to synthesize viral DNA, they do not appear able to reinitiate cellular DNA replication units. These results imply that the abundance of T-antigen (produced independently of cell cycle phase) in the presence of the enzymes required for continued DNA synthesis is not sufficient for reinitiation of cellular DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

6.
The infection of monkey kidney (CV-1) cells with simian virus 40 (SV40) stimulates the cells into successive rounds of DNA synthesis without an intervening mitosis, leading to the acquisition of a >G2 DNA content. To elucidate the role of small t antigen in cell cycle progression and in viral replication during infection, studies were performed using an SV40 mutant (dl888) that lacks the ability to produce small t. Initially dl888-infected cells move through the first S phase at roughly the same rate as wild-type infected cells. Upon reaching G2, however, the dl888-infected cells progressed to >G2 at a reduced rate relative to wild-type. The slower rate of entry into >G2 of dl888-infected cells is associated with a decrease in total pRb and an increase in the ratio of hypophosphorylated to hyperphosphorylated pRb. The expression of cyclin D1 and p27(kip1) were elevated in dl888-infected cells compared to wild-type-infected CV-1 cells. Taken together, these results indicate that small t antigen plays a role in stimulating entry into >G2 in SV40-infected CV-1 cells, possibly by affecting the regulation of key cell cycle proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Lytic infection of African green monkey kidney (CV-1) cells by simian virus 40 (SV40) is characterized by stimulation of DNA synthesis leading to bypass of mitosis and replication of cellular and viral DNA beyond a 4C DNA content. To define mechanisms underlying the absence of mitosis, the expression levels of upstream regulatory molecules of mitosis-promoting factor (MPF) were compared in parallel synchronized cultures of SV40-infected and uninfected CV-1 cells. The DNA replication/damage checkpoint kinase Chk1 was phosphorylated in both uninfected and SV40-infected cultures arrested at G(1)/S by mimosine, consistent with checkpoint activation. Following release of uninfected cultures from G(1)/S, Chk1 phosphorylation was lost even though Chk1 protein levels were retained. In contrast, G(1)/S-released SV40-infected cultures exhibited dephosphorylation of Chk1 in S phase, followed by an increase in Chk1 phosphorylation coinciding with entry of infected cells into >G(2). Inhibitors of Chk1, UCN-01 and caffeine, induced mitosis and abnormal nuclear condensation and increased the protein kinase activity of MPF in SV40-infected CV-1 cells. These results demonstrate that SV40 lytic infection triggers components of a DNA damage checkpoint pathway. In addition, chemical inhibition of Chk1 activity suggests that Chk1 contributes to the absence of mitosis during SV40 lytic infection.  相似文献   

8.
Human cytomegalovirus infection inhibits G1/S transition.   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Cell cycle progression during cytomegalovirus infection was investigated by fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) analysis of the DNA content in growth-arrested as well as serum-stimulated human fibroblasts. Virus-infected cells maintained in either low (0.2%) or high (10%) serum failed to progress into S phase and failed to divide. DNA content analysis in the presence of G1/S (hydroxyurea and mimosine) and G2/M (nocodazole and colcemid) inhibitors demonstrated that upon virus infection of quiescent (G0) cells, the cell cycle did not progress beyond the G1/S border even after serum stimulation. Proteins which normally indicate G1/S transition (proliferating cell nuclear antigen [PCNA]) or G2/M transition (cyclin B1) were elevated by virus infection. PCNA levels were induced in infected cells and exhibited a punctate pattern of nuclear staining instead of the diffuse pattern observed in mock-infected cells. Cyclin B1 was induced in infected cells which exhibited a G1/S DNA content by FACS analysis, suggesting that expression of this key cell cycle function was dramatically altered by viral functions. These data demonstrate that contrary to expectations, cytomegalovirus inhibits normal cell cycle progression. The host cell is blocked prior to S phase to provide a favorable environment for viral replication.  相似文献   

9.
Simian virus 40 (SV40) infection stimulates confluent cultures of monkey kidney cells into successive rounds of cellular DNA synthesis without intervening mitosis. As an initial step in defining the mechanisms responsible for viral inhibition of mitosis, M-phase-promoting factor (MPF) was examined in SV40-infected CV-1 cells passing from G2 phase into a second S phase. MPF is a serine-threonine protein kinase that is essential for mitosis in eukaryotic cells. In SV40-infected cells exiting G2 phase, there was a reduced amount of MPF-associated H1 kinase activity relative to that of uninfected cells passing through mitosis. Both subunits of MPF, cyclin B and the p34cdc2 catalytic subunit, were present and in a complex in infected cells. In uninfected cultures, passage through mitosis was associated with the dephosphorylation of the p34cdc2 subunit, which is characteristic of MPF activation. In contrast, the p34cdc2 subunit remained in the tyrosine-phosphorylated, inactive form in SV40-infected cells passing from G2 phase into a second S phase. These results suggest that although the MPF complex is assembled and modified normally, SV40 interferes with pathways leading to MPF activation.  相似文献   

10.
Monolayers of CV-1 cells were synchronized at the G1/S boundary of the cell cycle by a 24-h 2 mM thymidine blockade. Uptake of tritiated thymidine indicated that the peak DNA synthesis occurred 6-8 h after release from the block and that cell cycle time was 18-20 h. The fatty acid composition of phospholipids extracted from cells at 0, 7, and 18 h postblockade was measured by gas chromatography. The results indicate cyclic changes in membrane fatty acids with a significant increase in long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids during the DNA synthesis phase (S phase) of the cell cycle.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Female Swiss mice were sacrificed at 2 h intervals between 16–30 and 40–56 h after insemination. One-, 2- and 4-cell embryos were stained by the Feulgen method and cytophotometric measurement of their nuclear DNA content was carried out. The cells with 2C and 4C DNA content were assumed to be in G1 and G2 phase and those with intermediate DNA content in S phase of the cell cycle. The fractions of cells which had passed a given phase of the cell cycle were calculated for various times after insemination and utilized for measurements of the second and third cell cycle timing. Results of measurements for the second cell cycle: G1 phase 1.3 h, S phase 6.1 h, G2 phase 15.4 h, whereas for the third cell cycle: G1 phase 1.6 h, S phase 7.4 h, G2 phase 0.5 h. The first cleavage division was calculated as 1.6 h, the second as 1.3 h and the third as 1.2 h. Complete intra-embryonic synchronization of the DNA-synthesizing nuclei was preserved during the entire synthesis phase of 2-cell embryos, while in 4-cell embryos they were slightly asynchronized. Among mitotic cells of the first cleavage division and G1 cells of 2-cell embryos a slight interembryonic asynchronization was found which deepened during subsequent cell cycle phases.  相似文献   

13.
The E1B 55-kDa oncoprotein of adenovirus enables the virus to overcome restrictions imposed on viral replication by the cell cycle. Approximately 20% of HeLa cells infected with an E1B 55-kDa mutant adenovirus produced virus when evaluated by electron microscopy or by assays for infectious centers. By contrast, all HeLa cells infected with a wild-type adenovirus produced virus. The yield of E1B mutant virus from randomly cycling HeLa cells correlated with the fraction of cells in S phase at the time of infection. In synchronously growing HeLa cells, approximately 75% of the cells infected during S phase with the E1B mutant virus produced virus, whereas only 10% of the cells infected during G1 produced virus. The yield of E1B mutant virus from HeLa cells infected during S phase was sevenfold greater than that of cells infected during G1 and threefold greater than that of cells infected during asynchronous growth. Cells infected during S phase with the E1B mutant virus exhibited severe cytopathic effects, whereas cells infected with the E1B mutant virus during G1 exhibited a mild cytopathic effect. Viral DNA synthesis appeared independent of the cell cycle because equivalent amounts of viral DNA were synthesized in cells infected with either wild-type or E1B mutant virus. The inability of the E1B mutant virus to replicate was not mediated by the status of p53. These results define a novel property of the large tumor antigen of adenovirus in relieving growth restrictions imposed on viral replication by the cell cycle.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: Simian Virus 40 (SV40) infection of growth-arrested monkey kidney cells stimulates S phase entry and the continued synthesis of both viral and cellular DNA. Infected cells can attain total DNA contents as high as DNA Index, DI = 5.0-6.0 (10-12C), with host cell DNA representing 70-80% of the total. In this study, SV40-infected and uninfected control cells were compared to determine whether continued DNA replication beyond DI = 2.0 was associated with rebinding of the minichromosome maintenance (MCM) hexamer, the putative replicative helicase, to chromatin. METHOD: Laser scanning cytometry was used to measure the total expression per cell and the chromatin/matrix-association of two MCM subunits in relation to DNA content. RESULTS: MCM2 and MCM3 proteins that were associated with the chromatin/matrix fraction in G1 phase of both uninfected and SV40-infected cells were gradually released during progression through S phase. However, in SV40-infected cells that progressed beyond DI = 2.0, chromatin/matrix-associated MCM2 and MCM3 remained at the low levels observed at the end of S phase. Rereplication was not preceded by an obvious rebinding of MCM proteins to chromatin, as was observed in G1 phase. CONCLUSIONS: The rereplication of host cell DNA in the absence of the reassociation of MCM proteins with chromatin indicates that SV40 infection induces a novel mechanism of licensing cellular DNA replication.  相似文献   

15.
H E Varmus  T Padgett  S Heasley  G Simon  J M Bishop 《Cell》1977,11(2):307-319
We have used two experimental strategies to test the role of cellular functions in the synthesis and integration of virus-specific DNA in cells infected by avian sarcoma virus.First, quail embryo fibroblasts, placed in stationary phase (G0) by prolonged serum starvation, did not support the efficient synthesis of viral DNA during the first 24–48 hr after infection. Synthesis of viral DNA was impaired according to at least two parameters: the amount of DNA was diminished, particularly the amount of the plus-strand DNA (identical in polarity to the viral genome); and the length of both minus and plus strands was reduced in the stationary cells. In parallel cultures fed with fresh serum, over two thirds of the cells were able to reenter the cell cycle within 24 hr, and viral DNA of normal size was synthesized.Second, density labeling of viral and cellular DNA with BUdR was used to determine whether cellular DNA synthesis was required for integration of viral DNA. In both quail embryo fibroblasts released from G0 by serum replacement and randomly growing duck embryo fibroblasts, viral DNA was integrated only into cellular DNA replicated during the infection.Our results indicate that serum-starved cells lack a factor (or factors) required for the efficient and complete synthesis of ASV-specific DNA. We have not been able to establish whether such factor(s) are present in growing cells only during S phase. Integration of viral DNA appears to require cellular DNA synthesis; this may be due to a requirement for a factor (or factors) present in adequate concentration only during S phase or to a requirement for the structural changes in cellular DNA that accompany replication.  相似文献   

16.
It is unknown whether the mammalian cell cycle could impact the assembly of viruses maturing in the nucleus. We addressed this question using MVM, a reference member of the icosahedral ssDNA nuclear parvoviruses, which requires cell proliferation to infect by mechanisms partly understood. Constitutively expressed MVM capsid subunits (VPs) accumulated in the cytoplasm of mouse and human fibroblasts synchronized at G0, G1, and G1/S transition. Upon arrest release, VPs translocated to the nucleus as cells entered S phase, at efficiencies relying on cell origin and arrest method, and immediately assembled into capsids. In synchronously infected cells, the consecutive virus life cycle steps (gene expression, proteins nuclear translocation, capsid assembly, genome replication and encapsidation) proceeded tightly coupled to cell cycle progression from G0/G1 through S into G2 phase. However, a DNA synthesis stress caused by thymidine irreversibly disrupted virus life cycle, as VPs became increasingly retained in the cytoplasm hours post-stress, forming empty capsids in mouse fibroblasts, thereby impairing encapsidation of the nuclear viral DNA replicative intermediates. Synchronously infected cells subjected to density-arrest signals while traversing early S phase also blocked VPs transport, resulting in a similar misplaced cytoplasmic capsid assembly in mouse fibroblasts. In contrast, thymidine and density arrest signals deregulating virus assembly neither perturbed nuclear translocation of the NS1 protein nor viral genome replication occurring under S/G2 cycle arrest. An underlying mechanism of cell cycle control was identified in the nuclear translocation of phosphorylated VPs trimeric assembly intermediates, which accessed a non-conserved route distinct from the importin α2/β1 and transportin pathways. The exquisite cell cycle-dependence of parvovirus nuclear capsid assembly conforms a novel paradigm of time and functional coupling between cellular and virus life cycles. This junction may determine the characteristic parvovirus tropism for proliferative and cancer cells, and its disturbance could critically contribute to persistence in host tissues.  相似文献   

17.
The components of the cell cycle for a feline embryo cell line were defined. Thymidine (6mM)-supplemented medium reversibly arrested cells 1 h into the S phase of the cell cycle and was used in a double blocking procedure to synchronize cells to the early S phase. The kinetics of feline panleukopenia virus replication in synchronized cells was studied by using (i) inclusion body formation, (ii) a plaque assay for cell-associated and cell-free virus under one-step growth conditions, (iii) an enzyme immunoassay for viral protein, (iv) electron microscopy of infected cells, and (v) the detection and identification of viral replicative form DNA by restriction endonuclease analysis. Parallel studies by each of these procedures of the replication of feline panleukopenia virus in cells in which a 6 mM thymidine block was maintained indicated that parvovirus replicated with essentially similar kinetics in both unblocked, synchronized cells and in cells in which the block was maintained. Accordingly, a 6 mM thymidine-supplemented medium, although it effectively blocks cellular DNA synthesis, does not block the replication of parvovirus.  相似文献   

18.
The relationship between replication of simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA and the various periods of the host-cell cycle was investigated in synchronized CV(1) cells. Cells synchronized through a double excess thymidine procedure were infected with SV40 at the beginning or the middle of S, or in G(2). The first viral progeny DNA molecules were in all instances detected approximately 20 h after release from the thymidine block, independent of the time of infection. The length of the early, prereplicative phase of the virus growth cycle therefore depended upon the period of the cell cycle at which the cells were infected. Infection with SV40 was also performed on cells obtained in early G(1) through selective detachment of cells in metaphase. As long as the cells were in G(1) at the time of infection, the first viral progeny DNA molecules were detected during the S period immediately following, whereas if infection took place once the cells had entered S, no progeny DNA molecule could be detected until the S period of the next cell cycle. These results suggest that the infected cell has to pass through a critical stage situated in late G(1) or early S before SV40 DNA replication can eventually be initiated.  相似文献   

19.
Measles virus infection of unstimulated B lymphocytes suppresses both proliferation and differentiation into immunoglobulin-secreting cells. However, mitogenic stimulation of these infected cells results in cell volume enlargement, rapid RNA synthesis, and the expression of cell surface activation antigens 4F2, HLA-DS, and transferrin receptor. The cellular genes c-myc and histone 2B are induced during early G1 and S phase of the cell cycle, respectively, and viral RNA synthesis can be detected during this interval. However, total RNA synthesis is decreased at 48 h after stimulation, and the histone 2B RNA steady-state level at 48 h is fivefold less than that in uninfected cells. This sequence of events defines an arrest in the G1 phase of the cell cycle in measles virus-infected B cells.  相似文献   

20.
Productive infections by human papillomaviruses (HPVs) are restricted to nondividing, differentiated keratinocytes. HPV early proteins E6 and E7 deregulate cell cycle progression and activate the host cell DNA replication machinery in these cells, changes essential for virus synthesis. Productive virus replication is accompanied by abundant expression of the HPV E4 protein. Expression of HPV1 E4 in cells is known to activate cell cycle checkpoints, inhibiting G(2)-to-M transition of the cell cycle and also suppressing entry of cells into S phase. We report here that the HPV1 E4 protein, in the presence of a soluble form of the replication-licensing factor (RLF) Cdc6, inhibits initiation of cellular DNA replication in a mammalian cell-free DNA replication system. Chromatin-binding studies show that E4 blocks replication initiation in vitro by preventing loading of the RLFs Mcm2 and Mcm7 onto chromatin. HPV1 E4-mediated replication inhibition in vitro and suppression of entry of HPV1 E4-expressing cells into S phase are both abrogated upon alanine replacement of arginine 45 in the full-length E4 protein (E1;E4), implying that these two HPV1 E4 functions are linked. We hypothesize that HPV1 E4 inhibits competing host cell DNA synthesis in replication-activated suprabasal keratinocytes by suppressing licensing of cellular replication origins, thus modifying the phenotype of the infected cell in favor of viral genome amplification.  相似文献   

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