Abstract: | Phenotypic wild-type revertants from a UV-irradiated temperature-sensitive late mutant (ts BC245) of simian virus 40 (SV40) were isolated after replication in monkey cells at the nonpermissive temperature. The mutations occurring in 7 revertants were identified by DNA sequence analysis of the entire gene involved. All 10 mutations identified constituted single base substitutions, 7 of which occurred opposite pyrimidine doublets. Transitions were 3 times more abundant than transversions. Three base changes did not occur opposite pyrimidine-pyrimidine sequences. Exchange of a DNA fragment harbouring the altered base from a revertant with the corresponding fragment from the parental virus, showed that the base substitution was indeed responsible for the reversions to the wild-type phenotype (growth at the restrictive temperature). The data suggest that most base substitutions in highly UV-irradiated simian virus 40 are targeted at sites comprising two adjacent pyrimidines. |