scholarly journals DNA replication from initiation zones of mammalian cells in a model system.

1994 ◽  
Vol 14 (10) ◽  
pp. 6489-6496 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Ishimi ◽  
K Matsumoto ◽  
R Ohba

We reported that DNA replication initiates from the region containing an autonomously replicating sequence from Saccharomyces cerevisiae when negatively supercoiled plasmid DNA is incubated with the proteins required for simian virus 40 DNA replication (Y. Ishimi and K. Matsumoto, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 90:5399-5403, 1993). In this study, the DNAs containing initiation zones from mammalian cells were replicated in this model system. When negatively supercoiled DNA containing an initiation zone (2 kb) upstream of the human c-myc gene was incubated with simian virus 40 T antigen as a DNA helicase, HSSB (also called replication protein A), and DNA polymerase alpha-primase complex isolated from HeLa cells, DNA replication was specifically initiated from the center of the initiation zone, which was elongated bidirectionally in the presence of a DNA swivelase. Without HSSB, the level of DNA synthesis was significantly reduced and the localized initiation could not be detected, indicating that HSSB plays an essential role in the initiation of DNA replication. The digestion of negatively supercoiled template DNA with a single-strand-specific nuclease revealed that HSSB stimulated DNA unwinding in the center of the initiation zone where the DNA duplex is relatively unstable. In contrast, DNA replication started from a broad region of an initiation zone downstream of the dihydrofolate reductase gene from chinese hamster ovary cells, but the center of the region was mapped near the origin of bidirectional DNA replication. These results suggested that this system mimics a fundamental process of initiation of eukaryotic DNA replication. The mechanism of initiation is discussed.

1994 ◽  
Vol 14 (10) ◽  
pp. 6489-6496
Author(s):  
Y Ishimi ◽  
K Matsumoto ◽  
R Ohba

We reported that DNA replication initiates from the region containing an autonomously replicating sequence from Saccharomyces cerevisiae when negatively supercoiled plasmid DNA is incubated with the proteins required for simian virus 40 DNA replication (Y. Ishimi and K. Matsumoto, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 90:5399-5403, 1993). In this study, the DNAs containing initiation zones from mammalian cells were replicated in this model system. When negatively supercoiled DNA containing an initiation zone (2 kb) upstream of the human c-myc gene was incubated with simian virus 40 T antigen as a DNA helicase, HSSB (also called replication protein A), and DNA polymerase alpha-primase complex isolated from HeLa cells, DNA replication was specifically initiated from the center of the initiation zone, which was elongated bidirectionally in the presence of a DNA swivelase. Without HSSB, the level of DNA synthesis was significantly reduced and the localized initiation could not be detected, indicating that HSSB plays an essential role in the initiation of DNA replication. The digestion of negatively supercoiled template DNA with a single-strand-specific nuclease revealed that HSSB stimulated DNA unwinding in the center of the initiation zone where the DNA duplex is relatively unstable. In contrast, DNA replication started from a broad region of an initiation zone downstream of the dihydrofolate reductase gene from chinese hamster ovary cells, but the center of the region was mapped near the origin of bidirectional DNA replication. These results suggested that this system mimics a fundamental process of initiation of eukaryotic DNA replication. The mechanism of initiation is discussed.


1998 ◽  
Vol 72 (11) ◽  
pp. 8676-8681 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natalia V. Smelkova ◽  
James A. Borowiec

ABSTRACT Dimerization of simian virus 40 T-antigen hexamers (TAgH) into double hexamers (TAgDH) on model DNA replication forks has been found to greatly stimulate T-antigen DNA helicase activity. To explore the interaction of TAgDH with DNA during unwinding, we examined the binding of TAgDH to synthetic DNA replication bubbles. Tests of replication bubble substrates containing different single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) lengths indicated that efficient formation of a TAgDH requires ≥40 nucleotides (nt) of ssDNA. DNase I probing of a substrate containing a 60-nt ssDNA bubble complexed with a TAgDH revealed that T antigen bound the substrate with twofold symmetry. The strongest protection was observed over the 5′ junction on each strand, with 5 bp of duplex DNA and ∼17 nt of adjacent ssDNA protected from nuclease cleavage. Stimulation of the T-antigen DNA helicase activity by an increase in ATP concentration caused the protection to extend in the 5′ direction into the duplex region, while resulting in no significant changes to the 3′ edge of strongest protection. Our data indicate that each TAgH encircles one ssDNA strand, with a different strand bound at each junction. The process of DNA unwinding results in each TAgH interacting with a greater length of DNA than was initially bound, suggesting the generation of a more highly processive helicase complex.


2002 ◽  
Vol 76 (10) ◽  
pp. 5121-5130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert D. Ott ◽  
Yingda Wang ◽  
Ellen Fanning

ABSTRACT The recruitment of DNA polymerase α-primase (pol-prim) is a crucial step in the establishment of a functional replication complex in eukaryotic cells, but the mechanism of pol-prim loading and the composition of the eukaryotic primosome are poorly understood. In the model system for simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA replication in vitro, synthesis of RNA primers at the origin of replication requires only the viral tumor (T) antigen, replication protein A (RPA), pol-prim, and topoisomerase I. On RPA-coated single-stranded DNA (ssDNA), T antigen alone mediates priming by pol-prim, constituting a relatively simple primosome. T-antigen activities proposed to participate in its primosome function include DNA helicase and protein-protein interactions with RPA and pol-prim. To test the role of these activities of T antigen in mediating priming by pol-prim, three replication-defective T antigens with mutations in the ATPase or helicase domain have been characterized. All three mutant proteins interacted physically and functionally with RPA and pol-prim and bound ssDNA, and two of them displayed some helicase activity. However, only one of these, 5030, mediated primer synthesis and elongation by pol-prim on RPA-coated ssDNA. The results suggest that a novel activity, present in 5030 T antigen and absent in the other two mutants, is required for T-antigen primosome function.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 4685-4689 ◽  
Author(s):  
L T Vassilev ◽  
W C Burhans ◽  
M L DePamphilis

A general method for determining the physical location of an origin of bidirectional DNA replication has been developed recently and shown to be capable of correctly identifying the simian virus 40 origin of replication (L. Vassilev and E. M. Johnson, Nucleic Acids Res. 17:7693-7705, 1989). The advantage of this method over others previously reported is that it avoids the use of metabolic inhibitors, the requirement for cell synchronization, and the need for multiple copies of the origin sequence. Application of this method to exponentially growing Chinese hamster ovary cells containing the nonamplified, single-copy dihydrofolate reductase gene locus revealed that DNA replication begins bidirectionally in an initiation zone approximately 2.5 kilobases long centered about 17 kilobases downstream of the DHFR gene, coinciding with previously described early replicating sequences. These results demonstrate the utility of this mapping protocol for identifying cellular origins of replication and suggest that the same cellular origin is used in both the normal and the amplified DHFR locus.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 4685-4689
Author(s):  
L T Vassilev ◽  
W C Burhans ◽  
M L DePamphilis

A general method for determining the physical location of an origin of bidirectional DNA replication has been developed recently and shown to be capable of correctly identifying the simian virus 40 origin of replication (L. Vassilev and E. M. Johnson, Nucleic Acids Res. 17:7693-7705, 1989). The advantage of this method over others previously reported is that it avoids the use of metabolic inhibitors, the requirement for cell synchronization, and the need for multiple copies of the origin sequence. Application of this method to exponentially growing Chinese hamster ovary cells containing the nonamplified, single-copy dihydrofolate reductase gene locus revealed that DNA replication begins bidirectionally in an initiation zone approximately 2.5 kilobases long centered about 17 kilobases downstream of the DHFR gene, coinciding with previously described early replicating sequences. These results demonstrate the utility of this mapping protocol for identifying cellular origins of replication and suggest that the same cellular origin is used in both the normal and the amplified DHFR locus.


1984 ◽  
Vol 4 (8) ◽  
pp. 1476-1482
Author(s):  
H Ariga

The replicating activity of several cloned DNAs containing putative origin sequences was examined in a cell-free extract that absolutely depends on simian virus 40 (SV40) T antigen promoting initiation of SV40 DNA replication in vitro. Of the three DNAs containing the human Alu family sequence (BLUR8), the origin of (Saccharomyces cerevisiae plasmid 2 micron DNA (pJD29), and the yeast autonomous replicating sequence (YRp7), only BLUR8 was active as a template. Replication in a reaction mixture with BLUR8 as a template was semiconservative and not primed by a putative RNA polymerase III transcript synthesized on the Alu family sequence in vitro. Pulse-chase experiments showed that the small-sized DNA produced in a short-term incubation was converted to full-length closed circular and open circular DNAs in alkaline sucrose gradients. DNA synthesis in extracts began in a region of the Alu family sequence and was inhibited 80% by the addition of anti-T serum. Furthermore, partially purified T antigen bound the Alu family sequence in BLUR8 by the DNA-binding immunoassay. These results suggest that SV40 T antigen recognizes the Alu family sequence, similar to the origin sequence of SV40 DNA, and initiates semiconservative DNA replication in vitro.


1986 ◽  
Vol 6 (12) ◽  
pp. 4295-4304
Author(s):  
D B Roth ◽  
J H Wilson

Although DNA breakage and reunion in nonhomologous recombination are poorly understood, previous work suggests that short sequence homologies may play a role in the end-joining step in mammalian cells. To study the mechanism of end joining in more detail, we inserted a polylinker into the simian virus 40 T-antigen intron, cleaved the polylinker with different pairs of restriction enzymes, and transfected the resulting linear molecules into monkey cells. Analysis of 199 independent junctional sequences from seven constructs with different mismatched ends indicates that single-stranded extensions are relatively stable in monkey cells and that the terminal few nucleotides are critical for cell-mediated end joining. Furthermore, these studies define three mechanisms for end joining: single-strand, template-directed, and postrepair ligations. The latter two mechanisms depend on homologous pairing of one to six complementary bases to position the junction. All three mechanisms operate with similar overall efficiencies. The relevance of this work to targeted integration in mammalian cells is discussed.


1992 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 2514-2524 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z S Guo ◽  
M L DePamphilis

The origins of DNA replication (ori) in simian virus 40 (SV40) and polyomavirus (Py) contain an auxiliary component (aux-2) composed of multiple transcription factor binding sites. To determine whether this component stimulated replication by binding specific transcription factors, aux-2 was replaced by synthetic oligonucleotides that bound a single transcription factor. Sp1 and T-antigen (T-ag) sites, which exist in the natural SV40 aux-2 sequence, provided approximately 75 and approximately 20%, respectively, of aux-2 activity when transfected into monkey cells. In cell extracts, only T-ag sites were active. AP1 binding sites could replace completely either SV40 or Py aux-2. Mutations that eliminated AP1 binding also eliminated AP1 stimulation of replication. Yeast GAL4 binding sites that strongly stimulated transcription in the presence of GAL4 proteins failed to stimulate SV40 DNA replication, although they did partially replace Py aux-2. Stimulation required the presence of proteins consisting of the GAL4 DNA binding domain fused to specific activation domains such as VP16 or c-Jun. These data demonstrate a clear role for transcription factors with specific activation domains in activating both SV40 and Py ori. However, no correlation was observed between the ability of specific proteins to stimulate promoter activity and their ability to stimulate origin activity. We propose that only transcription factors whose specific activation domains can interact with the T-ag initiation complex can stimulate SV40 and Py ori-core activity.


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