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J. Virol., Jan 1995, 326-333, Vol 69, No. 1
MC Chen, D Redenius, F Osati-Ashtiani and MM Fluck
A major role for polyomavirus middle T/small T antigens in viral DNA
synthesis was uncovered by examining the replication of middle T/small
T-deficient mutants (hr-t mutants). hr-t mutants in the A2 genetic
background showed a 16- to 100-fold defect in genome accumulation relative
to the wild type when infections were carried out in exponentially growing
NIH 3T3 cells in medium supplemented with low levels of serum (< 2.0%).
A proportional decrease in the level of viral early transcripts was also
seen. The replication defect of the hr-t mutants was partially overcome in
the presence of the phorbol ester 12- O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate.
The defect was also alleviated by a duplication encompassing the alpha core
enhancer domain that contains binding sites for the transcriptional
activators PEA1/AP-1 and PEA3/c- ets. Such a duplication is present in all
naturally occurring hr-t mutants and absent in the A2 strain. The effects
of 12-O- tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate and alpha core duplication were
additive but did not fully complement the absence of middle T/small T. In
mixed infection competition experiments with two hr-t mutants, a genome
that carried an alpha core duplication had a replication advantage (up to
17-fold) over a genome without duplication. This result demonstrates that
one effect of the duplication is exerted directly at the level of DNA
replication. The advantage of the duplication-bearing genome was
established during the earliest stages of replication and was not further
amplified in later rounds of replication. In the presence of middle T/small
T, both genomes replicated to high levels and the advantage of the
duplication-bearing genome was eliminated. On the basis of these results,
we propose that factors that bind the alpha core domain (presumably PEA1
and PEA3) are present in limiting amounts in exponentially growing NIH 3T3
cells and play a crucial role in polyomavirus DNA replication. We further
suggest that middle T and/or small T stimulates viral DNA replication by
activating these factors. The fact that all middle T-/small T-defective
hr-t mutants have evolved to contain enhancer duplications that encompass
the PEA1 and PEA3 binding sites in the alpha core domain and partially
restore their replication defect (A. Amalfitano, M. C. Chen, and M. Fluck,
unpublished data) provides an adequate explanation for the fact that the
importance of the role of the middle T and/or small T function in DNA
replication has not been recognized previously. Much evidence is available
in support of separate elements of this model.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400
WORDS)
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Enhancer-mediated role for polyomavirus middle T/small T in DNA replication
Department of Microbiology, Michigan State University, East Lansing 48823-1101.
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