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DNA synthesis in polyoma virus infection. II. Relationship between viral DNA replication and initiation of cellular DNA replicons
Authors:W P Cheevers  J B Hiscock
Institution:Cancer Research Laboratory University of Western Ontario London, Canada
Abstract:The rate of synthesis of cellular DNA is stimulated in stationary phase mouse embryo cells infected with polyoma virus. Nascent cellular DNA strands pulselabeled with 3H]thymidine in the presence of replicating viral DNA are smaller, by an average of 2·1 × 107 daltons, than DNA made under similar conditions in uninfected cells. Previous work (Cheevers et al., 1972) has indicated that this observation is the consequence of activation in infected cells of cellular DNA initiation sites not in operation during a similar pulse-labeling interval in uninfected cells. Similar results were obtained using cells infected with the temperature-sensitive Ts-a mutant of polyoma at 32 °C, which permits both the induction of cellular DNA synthesis and replication of viral DNA. However, at a temperature of 39 °C, which permits only the induction of cellular DNA replication in Ts-a-infected cells, the size of newly synthesized DNA is not different from that of uninfected cells. Similarly, in rat embryo cells abortively infected with polyoma (wild-type), stimulation of cellular DNA synthesis occurs but viral DNA replication is restricted, and no difference is apparent in the size of newly formed DNA as compared to uninfected cells. These results are interpreted to mean that in productively infected cells, polyoma DNA and some regions of the host genome may be co-ordinately replicated.
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