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1.
Nuclear and polyadenylated RNA fractions of Raji cells are encoded by larger fractions of Epstein-Barr virus DNA (35 and 18%, respectively) than encode polyribosomal RNA (10%). Polyribosomal RNA is encoded by DNA mapping at 0.05 X 10(8) to 0.29 X 10(8), 0.63 X 10(8) to 0.66 X 10(8), and 1.10 X 10(8) to 0.03 X 10(8) daltons. An abundant, small (160-base), non-polyadenylated RNA encoded by EcoRI fragment J (0.05 X 10(8) to 0.07 X 10(8) daltons) is also present in the cytoplasm of Raji cells. After induction of early antigen in Raji cells, there was a substantial increase in the complexity of viral polyadenylated and polyribosomal RNAs. Thus, nuclear RNA was encoded by 40% of Epstein-Barr virus DNA, and polyadenylated and polyribosomal RNAs were encoded by at least 30% of Epstein-Barr virus DNA. Polyribosomal RNA from induced Raji cells was encoded by Epstein-Barr virus DNAs mapping at 0.05 X 10(8) to 0.29 X 10(8), 0.63 X 10(8) to 0.66 X 10(8), and 1.10 X 10(8) to 0.03 X 10(8) daltons and also by DNAs mapping within the long unique regions of Epstein-Barr virus DNA at 0.39 X 10(8) to 0.49 X 10(8), 0.51 X 10(8) to 0.59 X 10(8), 0.66 X 10(8) to 0.77 X 10(8), and 1.02 X 10(8) to 1.05 X 10(8) daltons.  相似文献   

2.
Namalwa and Raji cells, originally obtained from a Burkitt tumor biopsy, grow as continuous cell lines in vitro and contain the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-related nuclear antigen EBNA (B. M. Reedman and G. Klein, Int. J. Cancer 11:499-520, 1973) and RNA homologous to at least 17 and 30% of the EBV genome, respectively (S. D. Hayward and E. Kieff, J. Virol. 18:518-525, 1976; T. Orellana and E. Kieff, J. Virol. 22:321-330, 1977). The polyribosomal and polyadenylated [poly(A)+] RNA fractions of Namalwa and Raji cells are enriched for a class of viral RNA homologous to 5 to 7% of EBV DNA (Hayward and Kieff, J. Virol. 18:518-525, 1976; Orellana and Kieff, J. Virol. 22:321-330, 1977). The objective of the experiments described in this communication was to determine the location within the map of the EBV genome (D. Given and E. Kieff, J. Virol. 28:524-542, 1978) of the DNA which encodes the viral RNA in the poly(A)+ and non-polyadenylated [poly(A)-] RNA fractions of Namalwa cells. Hybridization of labeled DNA homologous to Namalwa poly(A)+ or poly(A)- RNA to blots containing EcoRI, Hsu I, or Hsu I/EcoRI double-cut fragments of EBV (B95-8) or (W91) DNA indicated that these RNAs are encoded by DNA contained primarily in the Hsu I A/EcoRI A and Hsu I B/EcoRI A fragments and, to a lesser extent, in other fragments of the EBV genome. Hybridizations of Namalwa poly(A)+ and poly(A)- RNA in solution to denatured labeled EcoRI A or B fragments, Hsu I A, B, or D fragments, and Hsu I A/EcoRI A or Bam I S fragments and of Raji polyribosomal poly(A)+ RNA to the EcoRI A fragment indicated that (i) Namalwa poly(A)+ RNA is encoded primarily by 6 x 10(5) daltons of a 2 x 10(6)-dalton segment of DNA, Bam I S, which is tandemly reiterated, approximately 10 times, in the Hsu I A/EcoRI A fragment and is encoded to a lesser extent by DNA in the Hsu I B, EcoRI B, and Hsu I D fragments. Raji polyribosomal poly(A)+ RNA is encoded by a similar fraction of the EcoRI A fragment as that which encodes Namalwa poly(A)+ RNA. (ii) The fraction of the Bam I S fragment homologous to Namalwa poly(A)- RNA is similar to the fraction homologous to Namalwa poly(A)+ RNA. However, Namalwa poly(A)- RNA is homologous to a larger fraction of the DNA in the Hsu I B, Hsu I D, and EcoRI B fragments.  相似文献   

3.
The complexity and abundance of Epstein-Barr (EBV)-specific RNA in cell cultures restringently, abortively, and productively infected with EBV has been analyed by hybridization of the infected cell RNA with purified viral DNA. The data indicate the following. (i) Cultures containing productively infected cells contain viral RNA encoded by at least 45% of EBV DNA, and almost all of the species of viral RNA are present in the polyadenylated and polyribosomal RNA fractions. (ii) Restringently infected Namalwa and Raji cultures, which contain only intranuclear antigen, EBNA, and enhanced capacity for growth in vitro, contain EBV RNA encoded by at least 16 and 30% of the EBV DNA, respectively. The polyadenylated and polyribosomal RNA fractions of Raji and Namalwa cells are enriched for a class of EBV RNA encoded by approximately 5% of EBV DNA. The same EBV DNA sequences encode the polyadenylated and polyribosomal RNA of both Raji and Namalwa cells. (iii) After superinfection of Raji cultures with EBV (HR-1), the abortively infected cells contain RNA encoded by at least 41% of EBV DNA. The polyadenylated RNA of superinfected Raji cells is enriched for a class of EBV RNA encoded by approximately 20% of EBV HR-1 DNA. Summation hybridization experiments suggest that the polyadenylated RNA in superinfected Raji cells is encoded by the same DNA sequences as encode RNA present in Raji cells before superinfection, most of which is not polyadenylated. That the same EBV RNA sequences are present in the polyadenylated and polyribosomal fractions of two independently derived, restringently infected cell lines suggests that these RNAs may specify functions related to maintenance of the transformed state. The complexity of this class of RNA is adequate to specify a sequence of a least 5,000 amino acids. That only some RNA species are polyadenylated in restringent and abortive infection suggests that polyadenylation or whatever determines polyadenylation may play a role in the restricted expression of the EVB genome.  相似文献   

4.
The DNA of herpesvirus pan, a primate B-lymphotropic herpesvirus, shares about 40% well-conserved sequence relatedness with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and herpesvirus papio DNAs. Labeled cloned fragments from the EBV recombinant DNA library were cross hybridized to blots of EcoRI, XbaI, and BamHI restriction endonuclease fragments of herpesvirus pan DNA to identify and map homologous sequences in the herpesvirus pan genome. Regions of colinear homology were demonstrated between 6 x 10(6) daltons and 108 x 10(6) daltons in the DNAs. The structural organization of herpesvirus pan DNA was similar to the format of Epstein-Barr virus and herpesvirus papio DNAs. The DNA consists of two domains of largely unique sequence complexity, a segment US of 9 x 10(6) daltons and a segment UL of 88 x 10(6) daltons. US and UL are separated by a variable number of tandem repetitions of a sequence IR (2 x 10(6) daltons). There was homology between DNA which mapped at 26 to 28 x 10(6) daltons and 93 to 95 x 10(6) daltons in UL. The terminal reiteration component, TR, of herpesvirus pan DNA and sequences which mapped to the left of 6 x 10(6) daltons and to the right of 108 x 10(6) daltons had no detectable homology with the corresponding regions of Epstein-Barr virus DNA.  相似文献   

5.
Epstein-Barr virus RNA in Burkitt tumor tissue.   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
T Dambaugh  F K Nkrumah  R J Biggar  E Kieff 《Cell》1979,16(2):313-322
Analysis of the viral RNA in four Burkitt tumor biopsies indicates that tumor tissue contains RNA homologous to at least 3–6% of the DNA of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Most of these RNA species accumulate in the polyadenylated RNA fraction of Burkitt tumor tissue. Two approaches have been used to determine the location within the EBV genome of the DNA sequences which encode stable RNA in two Burkitt tumor biopsies, F and S, which contain 6–10 copies per cell of at least 80% of the EBV genome. With the first approach, 32P-EBV DNA homologous to polyadenylated or nonpolyadenylated RNAs from the F, S or R tumors was hybridized to blots of fragments of EBV DNA. With the second approach, polyadenylated or nonpolyadenylated RNAs from the F or S tumors were hybridized to separated, labeled fragments of EBV DNA in solution. The results indicate that first, most of the viral RNA in Burkitt tumor tissue is encoded by approximately 20% of the Hsu I D fragment, 20% of the Eco RI A/Hsu I A double-cut fragment and 3% of the Hsu I B fragment of EBV DNA; second, an abundant RNA species in tumor tissue is homologous to the “additional DNA” present in the W91 and Jijoye/HR-I Burkitt tumor isolates of EBV and absent in the B95-8 virus, an isolate of EBV from outside the Burkitt endemic region; and third, there is little or no homology to other regions of the EBV genome.  相似文献   

6.
Epstein Barr virus (EBV) and herpesvirus papio (HVPapio) DNAs share a common format and 40% homology. Labeled cloned fragments of EBV DNA were hybridized to blots of XbaI, EcoRI, HindIII, and SalI fragments of HVPapio DNA. EBV fragments which mapped from 2 x 10(6) to 54 x 10(6) and from 59 x 10(6) to 106 x 10(6) daltons hybridized to fragments at identical map positions in HVPapio DNA. Regions of nonhomology were demonstrated at 0 x 10(6) to 2 x 10(6), 54 x 10(6) to 59 10(6), and 106 x 10(6) to 115 x 10(6) daltons.  相似文献   

7.
The arrangement of EcoRI, Hsu I, and Sal I restriction enzyme sites in the DNA of the B95-8 and W91 isolates of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) has been determined from the size of the single-enzyme-cleaved fragments and from blot hybridizations that identify which fragments cut from the DNA with one enzyme contain nucleotide sequences in common with fragments cut from the DNA with a second enzyme. The DNA of the B95-8 isolate was the prototype for this study. The data indicate that (i) approximately 95 X 10(6) to 100 X 10(6) daltons of EBV (B95-8) DNA is in a consistent and unique sequence arrangement. (ii) Both termini are variable in length. One end of the molecule after Hsu I endonuclease cleavage consists of approximately 3,000 base pairs, with as many as 10 additional 500-base pair segments. The opposite end of the molecule after Sal I endonuclease cleavage consists of approximately 1,500 base pairs, with as many as 10 additional 500-base pair segments. (iii) The opposite ends of the molecule contain homologous sequences. The high degree of homology between the opposite ends of the molecule and the similarity in size of the "additional" 500-base pair segments suggests that there are identical repeating units at both ends of the DNA. The arrangement of restriction endonuclease fragments of the DNA of the W91 isolate of EBV is similar to that of the B95-8 isolate and differs from the latter in the presence of approximately 7 X 10(6) daltons of "extra" DNA at a single site. Thus, the size of almost all EcoRI, Hsu I, and Sal I fragments of EBV (W91) DNA is identical to that of fragments of EBV (B95-8) DNA. A single EcoRI fragment, C, of EBV (W91) DNA is approximately 7 X 10(6) daltons larger than the corresponding EcoRI fragment of EBV (B95-8) DNA. Digestion of EBV (W91) DNA with Hsu I or Sal I restriction endonucleases produces two fragments (Hsu I D1 and D2 or Sal I G2 and G3) which differ in total size by approximately 7 X 10(6) daltons from the fragments of EBV (B95-8) DNA. Furthermore, the EcoRI, Hsu I, and Sal I fragments of EBV (W91) and (B95-8) DNAs, which are of similar molecular weight, have homologous nucleotide sequences. Moreover, the W91 fragments contain only sequences from a single region of the B95-8 genome. Two lines of evidence indicate that the "extra" sequences present in W91 EcoRI fragment C are viral DNA and not cellular. (i) The molecular weight of the "enlarged" EcoRI C fragment of EBV (W91) DNA is identical to that of the EcoRI C fragment of another isolate of EBV (Jijoye), (ii) The HR-1 clone of Jijoye has previously been shown to contain DNA which is not present in the B95-8 strain but is present in the EcoRI C and Hsu I D2 and D1 fragments of EBV (W91) DNA (N. Raab-Traub, R. Pritchett, and E. Kieff, J. Virol. 27:388-398, 1978).  相似文献   

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Cell lines were established by co-transfection of cloned M-ABA Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA fragments with plasmids conferring resistance to dominant selective markers. A baby hamster kidney cell line carrying the HindIII-I1 fragment exhibits a nuclear antigen of 82 000 daltons, serologically defined as EBV-determined nuclear antigen (EBNA) 1. Furthermore, a Rat-1 cell line transfected with DNA of the clone pM 780-28 containing three large internal repeats (BglII-U) and the adjacent BglII-C fragment expresses a nuclear antigen of 82 000 daltons which can be visualized only by a subset of anti EBNA-positive human sera. Sera recognizing the 82 000-dalton protein of the transfected cell line reacted with a protein of the same size in the non-producer line Raji, designated as EBNA 2. Conversely, sera without reactivity to the 82 000-dalton protein failed to react with EBNA 2 of Raji cells. P3HR-1 and Daudi cells with large deletions in BglII-U and -C are devoid of EBNA 2. The data presented provide evidence that a second EBNA protein is encoded by the region of the EBV genome which is deleted in the non-transforming P3HR-1 strain.  相似文献   

12.
Among the Epstein-Barr virions (EBV) produced by the P3HR-1 (HR-1) cell line are a defective subpopulation with rearranged viral DNA designated heterogeneous DNA (het DNA). These defective virions are responsible for the capacity of HR-1 virus to induce early antigen in Raji c cells and for trans activation of latent EBV in X50-7 cells. Virions with het DNA are independent replicons which pass horizontally from cell to cell rather than being partitioned vertically. We analyzed the structure and defined several polypeptide products of het DNA to understand these remarkable biologic properties. A 36-kilobase-pair (kbp) stretch of het DNA was cloned (as two EcoRI fragments of 20 and 16 kbp) from virions released from a cellular subclone of HR-1 cells. The unusual aspect of the 20-kbp fragment was the linkage of sequences of BamHI-M and BamHI-B', which are not adjacent on the standard EBV genome. The 16-kbp fragment was a palindrome in which at least two additional recombinations on each side of the palindrome had linked regions of the standard EBV genome which are not normally contiguous. The 20-kbp het DNA fragment was attached to at least one and possibly both ends of the 16-kbp het DNA fragment. We identified antigenic polypeptides produced in COS-1 cells after gene transfer of various cloned het DNA fragments. The 20-kbp fragment encoded a cytoplasmic antigen of about 95 kilodaltons (kDa). The 16-kbp fragment encoded antigens located in the nucleus, nuclear membrane, and cytoplasm. These were represented by several polypeptides, the most prominent of which were about 55, 52, and 36 kDa. The 36-kDa polypeptide was localized to a 2.7-kbp BamHI fragment which had homology to standard BamHI-W and BamHI-Z. Another polypeptide of 50 kDa found in the nucleus was mapped to the 7.1-kbp BamHI het DNA fragment which spans the EcoRI site linking the 20- and 16-kbp fragments of het DNA. Thus, HR-1 het DNA encodes several discrete polypeptide products, one or more of which could be responsible for the unusual biologic properties of the virus. The composition, regulation, and ultimately the expression of some of these products relative to standard EBV is probably altered by the genomic rearrangements of het DNA.  相似文献   

13.
A complete collection of fragments of Epstein-Barr virus DNA, obtained by cleavage with restriction endonuclease Eco RI, has been cloned. Fourteen different internal fragments of the virus genome, derived from linear virion DNA of the B95-8 strain, and sequences corresponding to the terminal regions of virion DNA, derived from intracellular circular EBV DNA isolated from 895-8 cells, were cloned. Sizes of fragments were determined by agarose gel electrophoresis and their sum leads to an estimated molecular weight of 110 x 10(6) for virion DNA. Large Eco RI DNA fragments of special interest were also cloned in cosmids using another source of EBV DNA, that is, to circular viral DNA derived from Raji cells. In order to provide a set of overlapping sequences, all the 29 internal Bam HI fragments of B95-8 virion DNA were cloned in pBR322. The map location within the viral genome of each cloned DNA fragment was identified by hybridizing to blots of virion DNA cleaved with several different restriction endonucleases.  相似文献   

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The BamHI M DNA fragment of the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) genome was inserted in two orientations into a simian virus 40-based expression vector, and the EBV-specific proteins produced in COS-7 monkey cells were examined. In one orientation, termed BamHI-M rightward reading frame 1 (BMRF1), a set of phosphoproteins ranging in size from 47,000 to 54,000 daltons was synthesized. These proteins reacted with monoclonal and polyclonal antisera, defining them as components of the EBV early antigen diffuse set of proteins (EA-D). The BamHI M DNA fragment in the opposite orientation, termed BamHI-M leftward reading frame 1 (BMLF1), directed the synthesis of a nuclear antigen detected by antibodies in serum from a patient with nasopharyngeal carcinoma. The BMLF1 antigen was not detected by monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies directed against the EA-D complex. A series of deletion mutants were constructed in the BamHI M DNA fragment, and the EA-D complex and BMLF1 antigen were mapped to discrete open reading frames in this DNA fragment. A test for several possible functions of these antigens showed that the BMLF1 antigen had the ability to activate or enhance, in trans, the level of expression of a gene under the control of the adenovirus early region 3 promoter or the simian virus 40 early promoter in the absence of its cis-acting enhancer. These experiments demonstrate a new gene function, encoded by EBV, that may be important in the positive regulation of viral or cellular genes.  相似文献   

17.
We used cloned BamHI fragments from Epstein-Barr virus strain B95-8 [EBV(B95-8)]DNA to obtain detailed restriction maps of the region of the genome adjacent to the large internal repeat cluster. These maps together with the results of hybridization experiments using a 3.1-kilobase repeat probe defined more precisely the location of the injection between the internal repeat cluster and the flanking unique-sequence DNA. On one side (UL), the repeat sequences extended 600 +/- 80 base pairs (bp) into BamHI-Y; on the other side (US), they extended 1,300 +/- 200 bp into BamHI-C. Therefore, EBV(B95-8) DNA contained a nonintegral number of 3.1-kilobase repeat units, namely, 12.6 copies. The mapping studies also revealed a second series of internal tandem repetitions in EBV(B95-8) DNA located within the BamHI-H fragment. This cluster comprised 11 copies of a 135-bp repeat unit which contained a single site for the NotI restriction endonuclease. Hybridization to these cloned EBV(B95-8) fragments using total EBV(HR-1) DNA as probe indicated that the deletion in EBV(HR-1) removed all 3,000 bp of unique-sequence DNA which lay between the large 3.1-kilobase and the small 135-bp repeat clusters. Thus, the deletion which destroyed the transforming ability in the EBV(HR-1) virus was bounded on either side by tandem repetitions.  相似文献   

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Epstein-Barr virus (B95-8) DNA consists of short (10 X 10(6)) and long (87 X 10(6)) unique DNA sequences joined by 10 tandem reiterations of a 1.85 X 10(6) DNA segment. The reiterated sequence contains BamI and BglII sites separated by 4 X 10(5). The 4.5 X 10(5) and 14.0 X 10(5) segments generated by cleavage of the reiterated DNA with BamI and BglII contain sequences which hybridize to each other, suggesting that the internal tandemly reiterated sequence has a direct or inverted repeat within it. The opposite ends of the linear, nicked, double-stranded DNA molecule (R. F. Pritchett, S. D. Hayward, and E. D. Kieff, J. Virol. 15:556--569, 1975) consist of from 1 to 12 direct repeats of another 3 X 10(5) sequence (D. Given and E. Kieff, J. Virol. 28:524--542, 1978; D. Given, D. Yee, K. Griem, and E. Kieff, J. Virol. 30:852--862, 1979). There is no homology between the internal reiterated sequence and either terminus. However, part of the internal reiteration (less than 5 X 10(5) is reiterated at two separate locations in the long unique region. The internal reiterations are a source of variation within EBV (B95-8) DNA preparations. Thus, although the majority of molecules contain 10 tandem reiterations, some molecules have 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, or fewer tandem reiterations. A consequence of this variability is that the KpnI A fragment and the EcoRI/Hsul A fragment consist of a family of seven or more fragments differing in the number of tandem internal reiterations. The EcoRI/HsuI A fragment of EBV (W91) DNA is approximately 6 X 10(6) smaller than the largest and dominant EcoRI/HsuI A fragment of EBV (B95-8) DNA. EBV (W91 DNA also differs from EBV (B95-8) DNA by an additional 7 X 10(6) to 8 X 10(6) of DNA in the long unique DNA region (D. Given and E. Kieff, J. Virol. 28:524--542, 1978; N. Raab-Traub, R. Pritchett, and E. Kieff, J. Virol. 27:388--398, 1978). These data suggest the possibility that the smaller number of internal reiterations in EBV (W91) DNA may be a consequence of the additional unique DNA and a restriction in the overall size of EBV DNA.  相似文献   

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