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1.
J Laffin  D Fogleman  J M Lehman 《Cytometry》1989,10(2):205-213
Human diploid fibroblasts (HDF) have a finite life span in cell culture which can be extended when transformed with simian virus 40 (SV40). Flow cytometric analysis of SV40-HDF transformation allowed DNA content changes to be correlated with the appearance, quantity, and distribution of T antigen, p53, and V antigen, three proteins associated with this process. These studies demonstrated a shift in the DNA content to tetraploidy, which was correlated with the age of the SV40-HDF but not the time of infection. A significant increase of the epitope recognized by PAb122 to host p53 and the epitope PAb101 to SV40 T antigen occurred at the same time the tetraploid population appeared. However, an antigen reactive with SV40 V antibody was present at high levels in most of the population early after infection, but the levels declined with time. The percentage of PAb101-T antigen-positive cells increased more rapidly in cells infected at a late passage, and this was concomitant with the shift in DNA content to tetraploid. Analysis of the mean fluorescence of total, gated populations (G1, G2, and greater than G2) demonstrated that a threshold level of p53 and T antigen was reached in each compartment of the cell cycle. As the transformed phenotype appeared, a population of cells was continually released into the supernatant, and although these cells had a DNA pattern similar to the monolayer cells, the T antigen and p53 levels were 3-5 times higher in the tetraploid G2 cells. These studies correlated the expression of proteins associated with viral transformation in HDF which vary with time and shift in DNA content.  相似文献   

2.
Primary or continuous lines of mouse cells (3T3) are nonpermissive for simian virus 40 (SV40). Abortively infected cells synthesize tumor antigen (T antigen but not viral DNA and virus capsid protein (V antigen). V antigen, however, was obtained when SV40 DNA was injected into 3T3 cells. This late gene expression also appears to be correlated with the quantity of injected DNA molecules per 3T3 cell. T antigen formation can be detected after microinjection of only 1 to 2 DNA molecules, but the intensity of intranuclear T antigen fluorescence is significantly brighter with injection of higher concentrations of viral DNA. In permissive cells (TC7), early and late SV40 gene expression is directly related to the number of injected molecules. Microinjection of 1DNA molecule induced T and V antigen formation with the same efficiency as microinjection of 2,000 to 4,000 molecules. The question of weather late SV40 gene expression is directly related to the quantity of an early virus-specific product was approached by microinjection of early SV40 complementary RNA together with small amounts of viral DNA. V antigen was obtained in a high proportion of recipient 3T3 cells at conditions where microinjection of viral DNA alone induced T but not V antigen synthesis.  相似文献   

3.
The simian virus 40 (SV40) large-T antigen is essential for SV40 DNA replication and for late viral gene expression, but the role of the SV40 small-t antigen in these processes is still unclear. We have previously demonstrated that small t inhibits SV40 DNA replication in vitro. In this study, we investigated the effect of small t on SV40 replication in cultured cells. CV1 monkey cell infection experiments indicated that mutant viruses that lack small t replicate less efficiently than the wild-type virus. We next microinjected CV1 cells with SV40 DNA with and without purified small-t protein and analyzed viral DNA replication efficiency by Southern blotting. Replication of either wild-type SV40 or small-t deletion mutant DNA was increased three- to fivefold in cells coinjected with purified small t. Thus, in contrast to our in vitro observation, small t stimulated viral DNA replication in vivo. This result suggests that small t has cellular effects that are not detectable in a reconstituted in vitro replication system. We also found that small t stimulated progression of permissive monkey cells--but not of nonpermissive rodent cells--from G0-G1 to the S phase of the cell cycle, possibly leading to an optimal intracellular environment for viral replication.  相似文献   

4.
The formation of oligomers of simian virus 40 (SV40) large T antigen in SV40-infected and -transformed monkey cells was analyzed by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The overall distribution of total T antigen during lytic infection showed mainly low-molecular-weight forms (monomers and dimers) in the early phase (10 h postinfection) and an increase in the number of oligomers in the late phase of the lytic cycle (36 h postinfection), indicating an accumulation of these final products. In contrast, studying the conversion of newly synthesized T antigen into oligomers by appropriate pulse-chase radiolabeling of infected cells revealed that this processing decelerates considerably during the late phase of infection. This mechanism can be reaccelerated by blocking DNA replication with aphidicolin. Since none of these results could be obtained by using synchronized SV40-transformed monkey cells (COS-1), these observations are compatible with the idea that the process of T antigen oligomerization may be involved in viral, but not in cellular, DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

5.
Zhao RY  Elder RT 《Cell research》2005,15(3):143-149
Progression of cells from G2 phase of the cell cycle to mitosis is a tightly regulated cellular process that requires activation of the Cdc2 kinase, which determines onset of mitosis in all eukaryotic cells. In both human and fission yeast(Schizosaccharomyces pombe) cells, the activity of Cdc2 is regulated in part by the phosphorylation status of tyrosine 15 (Tyrl5) on Cdc2, which is phosphorylated by Weel kinase during late G2 and is rapidly dephosphorylated by the Cdc25 tyrosine phosphatase to trigger entry into mitosis. These Cdc2 regulators are the downstream targets of two wellcharacterized G2/M checkpoint pathways which prevent cells from entering mitosis when cellular DNA is damaged or when DNA replication is inhibited. Increasing evidence suggests that Cdc2 is also commonly targeted by viral proteins,which modulate host cell cycle machinery to benefit viral survival or replication. In this review, we describe the effect of viral protein R (Vpr) encoded by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-Ⅰ) on cell cycle G2/M regulation. Based on our current knowledge about this viral effect, we hypothesize that Vpr induces cell cycle G2 arrest through a mechanism that is to some extent different from the classic G2/M checkpoints. One the unique features distinguishing Vpr-induced G2 arrest from the classic checkpoints is the role of phosphatase 2A (PP2A) in Vpr-induced G2 arrest.Interestingly, PP2A is targeted by a number of other viral proteins including SV40 small T antigen, polyomavirus T antigen, HTLV Tax and adenovirus E4orf4. Thus an in-depth understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying Vpr-induced G2 arrest will provide additional insights into the basic biology of cell cycle G2/M regulation and into the biological significance of this effect during host-pathogen interactions.  相似文献   

6.
7.
8.
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   

9.
We have made use of the cell-free SV40 DNA replication system to identify and characterize cellular proteins required for efficient DNA synthesis. One such protein, replication protein C (RP-C), was shown to be involved with SV40 large T antigen in the early stages of viral DNA replication in vitro. We demonstrate here that RP-C is identical to the catalytic subunit of cellular protein phosphatase 2A (PP2Ac). The purified protein dephosphorylates specific phosphoamino acid residues in T antigen, consistent with the hypothesis that SV40 DNA replication is regulated by modulating the phosphorylation state of the viral initiator protein. We also show that purified RP-C/PP2Ac preferentially stimulates SV40 DNA replication in extracts from early G1 phase cells. This finding suggests that the activity of a cellular factor that influences the net phosphorylation state of T antigen is cell cycle dependent.  相似文献   

10.
A simple method with which to determine the cell cycle parameters, TG1, TS and TG2M (the durations of the G1, S and G2 + M phases) is described. V79 Chinese hamster lung cells were used to evaluate the method. After continuous labeling with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), V79 cells were stained with anti BrdU-monoclonal antibody with FITC (fluorescein isothiocyanate) and with PI (propidium iodide). The individual cells were checked by flow cytometry for green and red fluorescences whose signal intensities corresponded to the BrdU and cellular DNA contents. The durations of G1, S and G2 + M phases of V79 cells were determined by measuring the cell fractions containing the nonlabeled G1, labeled S and nonlabeled G2 + M phases. The reliability of this method is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
We investigated whether the T antigen of the simian virus 40-transformed human cell line simian virus 80 ( SV80 ) specifically recognizes DNA sequences of its own template, i.e, the viral sequences integrated in the SV80 cellular genome. In vitro DNA binding experiments clearly indicated that, in contrast to wild-type T antigen, SV80 T antigen does not specifically bind to sites on the integrated viral DNA in SV80 cells.  相似文献   

12.
13.
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   

14.
Simian virus 40 (SV40) transformed V 11 F 1 clone 1 subclone 7 rat cells (subclone 7) do not synthesize normal-size large T antigen (M(r), 90,000); instead, they produce a 115,000 M(r) super T antigen (115K super T antigen). This super T antigen is SV40 virus coded, and its synthesis results from rearrangement and amplification of integrated viral DNA sequences in subclone 7 (May et al., Nucleic Acids Res. 9:4111-4128, 1981). In this study the functional activities of 115K super T antigen were compared with the functional activities of SV40 large T antigen. Transfection experiments were performed with (i) cosmid SVE 5 Kb and plasmid pSVsT, both containing the super T antigen gene and (ii) plasmids pSV1 and pSV40, both containing the large T antigen gene. Transfection of pSVsT DNA or SVE 5 Kb DNA into secondary cultures of rat kidney cells induced the formation of transformed cell foci with an efficiency that was about 50% of the efficiency of pSV1 DNA or pSV40 DNA. Concomitant with the transforming activity, two other activities were also retained by super T antigen, namely, the ability to enhance the level of host cellular protein p53 and the capacity to bind to p53. In contrast, pSVsT and SVE 5 Kb DNAs were markedly deficient in the capacity to support tsA58 DNA replication in CV1-P cells at a nonpermissive temperature (41 degrees C), as shown by cotransfection experiments. The yield of virus produced in these experiments was 400-fold less than the yield obtained in parallel experiments with pSV40 or pSV1. However, SVE 5 Kb and pSVsT have a functional SV40 replication origin, as shown by their efficient replication in COS 1 cells which provided functional large T antigen. Super T antigen also possesses a specific affinity for sequences of SV40 viral origin. Our results suggest that under certain conditions, evolutionary changes in T antigen take place and that these changes could be restricted to the phenotypic requirement of maintaining a structure that is able to induce cell transformation, to form a complex with p53, and to enhance the cellular level of p53. Therefore, there appears to be a close relationship among the activities of T antigen involved in transforming cells, in binding to p53, and in enhancing the p53 cellular level. Moreover, this set of activities appears to be separable from the replicative ability of T antigen, based on the observation that 115K super T antigen is markedly defective for initiating viral DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Simian virus 40 tumor antigen (SV40 T antigen) was bound to both replicating and fully replicated SV40 chromatin extracted with a low-salt buffer from the nuclei of infected cells, and at least a part of the association was tight specific. T antigen cosedimented on sucrose gradients with SV40 chromatin, and T antigen-chromatin complexes could be precipitated from the nuclear extract specifically with anti-T serum. From 10 to 20% of viral DNA labeled to steady state with [3H]thymidine for 12 h late in infection or 40 to 50% of replicating viral DNA pulse-labeled for 5 min was associated with T antigen in such immunoprecipitates. After reaction with antibody, most of the T antigen-chromatin complex was stable to washing with 0.5 M NaCl, but only about 20% of the DNA label remained in the precipitate after washing with 0.5 M NaCl-0.4% Sarkosyl. This tightly bound class of T antigen was associated preferentially with a subfraction of pulse-labeled replicating DNA which comigrated with an SV40 form I marker. A tight binding site for T antigen was identified tentatively by removing the histones with dextran sulfate and heparin from immunoprecipitated chromatin labeled with [32P]phosphate to steady state and then digesting the DNA with restriction endonucleases HinfI and HpaII. The site was within the fragment spanning the origin of replication, 0.641 to 0.725 on the SV40 map.  相似文献   

17.
Mouse 3T3 cells were grown and synchronized in monolayer with the double thymidine block. Their infection with SV40 took place continuously during the cellular cycle. However, integration of viral DNA into host cell DNA occurred preferentially during the S phase. Phase G1 appeared to be necessary for virus-cell DNA recombination in S phase. Phase G2 did not alter the stability of the integrated viral genome.  相似文献   

18.
The expression and stability of the proliferation-associated nuclear antigen detected by Ki-67 antibody have been investigated in human promyelocytic leukaemic HL-60 cells in relation to their progression through the cell cycle. Expression of this antigen was minimal in late G1 and early S phase cells. The antigen accumulated in the cells predominantly during S phase, and its rate of increase per cell accelerated during the second half of this phase. The accumulation of Ki-67 antigen during S exceeded the increase in DNA content, and thus the Ki-67/DNA ratio rose 80% from late G1 to G2 + M. This antigen rapidly disappeared from post-mitotic cells. The half-life of this protein estimated in post-mitotic cells during stathmokinesis induced by vinblastine appeared to be shorter than 1 h. This rapid turnover should be compared with the relatively long (6-8 h) duration of G1 of the studied cells. In cells in which de novo protein synthesis was inhibited by 0.1 microgram/ml cycloheximide, the half-life of the Ki-67 antigen was also found to be about 1 h regardless of the cell position in the cell cycle. Thus, the data suggest that variations in the level of this protein during the cell cycle are a consequence of its different synthesis rate rather than phase-specific changes in the rate of its degradation. Because the late G1 and very early S phase cells express the antigen at levels only slightly above background, it is possible that, when using Ki-67 antibody as a marker of the cell growth fraction, some late G1 cells can be erroneously classified as non-cycling cells.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The simian virus 40 (SV40) (cT)-3 mutant [SV40(cT)-3], which is defective in nuclear transport of T antigen, was utilized to determine whether cellular DNA synthesis can be stimulated by SV40 in the absence of detectable nuclear T antigen. Cellular DNA synthesis was examined in the temperature-sensitive cell cycle mutants, BHK ts13 and BHK tsAF8, after microinjection of quiescent cells with plasmid DNA containing cloned copies of wild-type SV40 or SV40(cT)-3. The efficiency of induction of cellular DNA synthesis was identical for both wild-type SV40 and SV40(cT)-3 in both cell lines. The results suggest that cell surface-associated T antigen, either alone or possibly in combination with minimal amounts of nuclear T antigen below our limit of detection, is able to stimulate cellular DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

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