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Journal of Virology, October 2002, p. 9614-9623, Vol. 76, No. 19
0022-538X/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.76.19.9614-9623.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology and Markey Cancer Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40536-0096
Received 11 February 2002/ Accepted 25 June 2002
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After a retrovirus enters a cell, the reverse transcriptases within the virion copy the viral RNA genome into a double-stranded DNA, which is subsequently integrated into host chromosomal DNA and becomes a provirus. The provirus is then replicated by cellular DNA polymerases as an integral element of host chromosome. Transcription of the provirus is carried out by cellular RNA polymerase II (Pol II), which produces both viral genomic RNAs and mRNAs encoding viral proteins. Viral proteins and viral RNAs are assembled into virions, and progeny viruses are released from the infected cells. Therefore, during the retroviral life cycle, retroviral genetic information is transmitted by viral reverse transcriptase, host DNA polymerase, and host RNA Pol II. Reverse transcription by viral reverse transcriptase can be further divided into two steps: minus-strand DNA synthesis with the viral RNA molecule as a template and plus-strand DNA synthesis with minus-strand DNA as a template. Each of these polymerization steps has the potential to introduce variations or mutations into progeny viruses.
In vivo systems for studying retroviral recombination or mutation include viral vectors, helper cells, and target cells. Viral vectors carry all viral cis-acting sequences required for viral replication and packaging; the trans-acting sequences in the vectors are replaced with gene(s) of interest. The helper cells constitutively provide viral proteins in trans so that the viral vector introduced into them can be packaged into infectious virions (vector viruses). Vector viruses are used to infect target cells, which do not express any viral proteins, and therefore do not support the production of new viruses. This strategy ensures that the life cycle of the viral vectors is restricted to a single round of replication (26). The rates of retroviral recombination are calculated by ratios of the number of recombinants to the number of the total progeny viruses.
The high fidelity of DNA replication suggests that recombination at the DNA level should be much less frequent than that incurred by reverse transcriptase. The fidelity of mammalian cellular RNA Pol II in retroviral template transcription is not yet known. Since retroviral genomic RNA is first transcribed from DNA by RNA Pol II, any deletion or recombination occurring during this process will contribute to genomic variation in retroviral replication. The present demonstrates that deletion during retroviral replication by host RNA Pol II was minimal. A previous study indicated that the frequency of deletion by DNA polymerase was also negligible (14); therefore, reverse transcription was the step associated with the high rate of intramolecular recombination.
Retroviral reverse transcriptase copies both minus-strand DNA and plus-strand DNA. Although most retroviral intermolecular recombinations occur during minus-strand DNA synthesis (25), it is unclear whether intramolecular recombinations also occur during minus-strand synthesis. We demonstrate here that, like intermolecular recombination, intramolecular recombination of Moloney murine leukemia virus (MLV) also occurs during minus-strand DNA synthesis. However, Bowman et al. (3) reported that recombination between two identical sequences within the same spleen necrosis virus RNA occur at similar frequencies during minus- and plus-strand DNA synthesis. This conclusion was based on observations obtained with a pool of viruses harvested after transfection, which did not allow the unambiguous determination of the structure and amount of the precursors to recombination (17, 24). Transfection could also introduce mutations and recombination, which could have interfered with their results. In this report, MLV-based vectors were constructed. The data demonstrated that plus-strand deletion did not occur.
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Vector construction. The construction of the MLV-based retroviral vectors JZ481 and JZ419 were described previously. Briefly, from the 5' to 3' direction, JZ481 carried two mutated copies of the color reporter gene, gfp, an internal ribosome entry segment (IRES) sequence, and a drug resistance gene, neo (Fig. 1A) (14). JZ419 is identical to JZ481 except that the two mutated gfp genes were replaced with a functional gfp gene (21). JZ442 (Fig. 2A) and JZ442+3'Hyg (Fig. 2B) were described previously (24). JZ442 encoded a hyg gene and a gfp genes, whereas JZ442+3'Hyg encoded the same hyg and gfp genes and an additional 290-bp 3' hyg segment downstream of the gfp gene. JZ442 PPT+3'Hyg (Fig. 2C) was identical to pJZ442+3'Hyg except that the 290-bp 3' hyg sequence was located downstream of the ppt and attL sequence. PJZ442+3'Hyg was digested with ClaI and NheI, followed by repair with Klenow fragment and ligation by T4 ligase, to delete the 75-bp ClaI-NheI sequence (positions 4415 and 4490) encoding the ppt and attL regions. The resulting plasmid was designated pJZ589. pJZ508 was identical to pJZ442 (Fig. 2A) except that pJZ508 contained a ClaI site and a NotI sites at the 3' end of the hyg gene. The AseI-NheI fragment of pJZ508 containing the 5' long terminal repeat, the hyg gene, the IRES, the gfp gene, and the 75-bp of ppt and attL region was inserted into the AseI-XbaI sites of pJZ589, in which a XhaI was located at the 5' end of the 290-bp hyg sequence. The resulting plasmid was designated pJZ442 PPT+3'Hyg (Fig. 2C). In addition to restriction mapping, the 3' end of gfp gene, the MLV 3'-nontranslated region, ppt, attL, the 290-bp 3' hyg sequence, and the 5' U3 of pJZ442 PPT+3'Hyg were sequenced. The sequences coincided with the structure predicted in Fig. 2C.
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FIG. 1. Structure of retrovirus vector used for determining of the recombination rate between two identical sequences within the same RNA molecule. (A) Structure of retrovirus vector containing two mutated gfp genes. JZ481 contains two nonfunctional gfp sequences in tandem positions and the neo gene. The 3' end of the first gfp and the 5' end of the second gfp are mutated. The neo gene is expressed from the encephalomyocarditis viral IRES. (B) Structure of a recombinant provirus. After one round of replication, the downstream gfp sequence recombines with the identical upstream gfp sequence, resulting in a functional gfp gene. The dashed lines between JZ481 and the recombinant provirus indicate identical sequences. (C) Structure of retrovirus vector encoding wild-type gfp gene. The structures of JZ419 and the expected recombinant JZ481 are identical. (D) Northern analysis of viral RNAs. Viral RNAs were extracted from viruses released from clear PG13 cells infected with JZ481 and PG13 cells infected with JZ419 and hybridized with a probe of the neo gene sequence. The approximate molecular sizes are shown on the left.
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FIG. 2. Structure of retrovirus vector used for intramolecular recombination. (A) JZ442 encodes a hyg gene and a gfp genes. (B) JZ442+3'Hyg encodes the same hyg and gfp genes and an additional 290-bp 3' hyg segment downstream of the gfp gene. (C) JZ442 PPT+3'Hyg is identical to pJZ442+3'Hyg except that the 3' hyg gene sequence is located downstream of the ppt and attL sequence. The dashed lines indicate identical sequences. (D, E, and F) Structure of step 3 proviruses.
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FIG. 3. (A) Outline of the experimental approach. Plasmid DNAs of pJZ481 and pJZ419 were transfected into an MLV amphotropic helper cell line, PA317, respectively (step 1). Supernatant medium containing the viruses was used to infect an MLV xenotropic helper cell line PG13. After selection with neomycin, clear and green neomycin-resistant (Neor) colonies were formed (step 2). PG13 cells were analyzed by flow cytometry. Viruses released from infected PG13 cells were analyzed by Northern blotting and were also used to infect D17 cells. The infected D17 cells were selected for neomycin resistance (step 3). Individual neomycin-resistant colonies were analyzed by fluorescence microscopy. (B) Schematic illustration of the experimental strategy for the study of a single round of JZ481 virus replication. The viral life cycle is represented in the form of DNA (provirus in PG13 cells), RNA (viruses released from PG13 cell), and DNA (provirus in target D17 cell), which depicts a single round of viral replication. Three polymerases are involved in four polymerization events (shown in boldface letters) during the transmission of retroviral genetic information.
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Northern analysis. Northern blotting was performed by standard methods (27). Briefly, 1 µg of viral RNAs was electrophoresd on a 1% agarose gel. The RNAs were then transferred onto a nitrocellulose membrane, which was probed with a 32P-labeled DNA fragment encompassing the neo gene (Fig. 1).
Preparation of Hirt fractionation. A total of 2 x 10 5 cells were infected with JZ442 PPT+3'Hyg of step 2 clone 5 with the highest titer (multiplicity of infection = 1:1). Cells were lysed for 20 min. by 1 ml of 0.6% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and 0.01 M EDTA at 36 h after infection (9). After being incubated at 4°C for overnight, the sample was centrifuged at 17,000 x g for 30 min at 4°C to remove the major proteins and the SDS. Then, 5 M NaCl was added to a final concentration of 1 M, and the DNA in a Hirt fractionation was precipitated with isopropanol. The remaining EDTA was removed by Wizard PCR DNA purification kit (Promega, Madison, Wis.).
Amplification of proviruses and sequencing analysis. The proviruses of step 2 were amplified with primer GFP 2312 (CTGGAGTTCGTGACCG), which annealed within the 3' end of gfp gene, and primer U3 3469 (GCTGGACCGCATCTGG), which annealed within the 3' U3. Hirt DNA and proviral DNA in step 3 cells were amplified by primer Hygro 1685 (GCTTGTATGGAGCAGCAGACG), which annealed with the 3' end of the hyg upstream the 290-bp sequence, and primer U3 3469. The sequencing primers were GFP 2312 (CTGGAGTTCGTGACCG), MLV U3 (ATGCCTTGCAAAATGG), GFP 1627 (TGAGCAAGGGCGAGGAGCTG), and GFP 2011 (GAACCGCATCGAGCTGAA).
Fluorescence microscopy. A fluorescence inverted microscope (Zeiss Axiovert 25) with a mercury arc lamp (100 W) and a fluorescent filter set (CZ909) consisting of a 470- to 40-nm exciter, a 515-nm emitter, and a 500-nm beamsplitter were used to detect green fluorescent protein (GFP) in living cells.
Flow cytometric analysis. Flow cytometric analysis was conducted by using a MoFlo Cytomation (Becton Dickinson) with a 488-nm argon ion laser operating at a constant power output at a flow rate of 500 to 600 cells per s with a total accumulation of 20,000 cells/run. The FL-1 emission channel was used to monitor the intensity of the GFP.
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To determine the overall rates of recombination during a single replication cycle (Fig. 3), the vector viruses of JZ481 were introduced into PG13 cells by infection as described in Materials and Methods to eliminate deletion caused by transfection (24). PG13 cells infected with JZ481 were designated step 2 cells. Viruses released from step 2 cells were unable to infect cells of murine origin, including PG13 itself (16). Furthermore, the target cells (D17) do not express any viral structural proteins; therefore, the infection of D17 cells with JZ481 viruses released from step 2 PG13 cells represented a single round of viral replication (Fig. 3) (26). A previous study demonstrated that, due to recombination between the two gfp genes, 51% ± 2% of the viruses underwent deletion after a single round of replication (14). The rate was redetermined here to be 46.2% ± 5.9% (Table 1).
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TABLE 1. Microscopic analysis of D17 cells infected with JZ481a
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In PG13 lines containing recombinant JZ481 proviruses, all of the viral RNA transcripts encode functional gfp; thus, the fluorescence intensity of these cells represents the amount of total viral RNA transcripts in the cells. In PG13 lines encoding parental-type JZ481 proviruses, most of the viral transcripts are of the parental type (encoding nonfunctional gfp), hence contributing no fluorescence to the host, but the amount of total viral RNA transcripts should be equal to that in cells with recombinant JZ481. If a portion of the viral RNAs have undergone deletion by recombination, thus encoding functional gfp, the amount of these deletion transcripts would be commensurate to the fluorescence they produced. Therefore, the ratio of the fluorescence intensity of PG13/parent-type JZ481 to that of PG13/recombinant JZ481 represents the percentage of recombinant transcripts present in the parent-type cells, or in other words, the frequency of deletion during transcription by host RNA Pol II.
Clear (parent-type) and green (recombinant) neomycin-resistant PG13 colonies (Fig. 3, step 2) were individually subcloned and then analyzed by flow cytometry. To compare the recombinant GFP with wild-type GFP, a PG13 cell line carrying JZ419 provirus was also analyzed (21). JZ419 encodes the same sequences as a recombinant JZ481 (Fig. 1B and C). The fluorescence intensity of PG13 carrying the recombinant JZ481 was the same as that of PG13/JZ419, which encoded a wild-type gfp gene (Fig. 4C and D). The fluorescence intensity of PG13 cells infected with parent-type JZ481 was similar to that of uninfected PG13 cells. (Fig. 4A and B).
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FIG. 4. Flow cytometric analysis of virus-infected PG13 cells. PG13 cells were infected with viruses JZ481 or JZ419, respectively. Infected PG13 cells were selected for neomycin resistance. Individual neomycin-resistant clones were isolated and analyzed by flow cytometry.
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In addition to analysis of the mRNA in the helper cells, the viral RNAs packaged into virions were also analyzed. A deleted JZ481 transcript contained the same sequence as the JZ419 transcript. Viruses released from PG13/JZ481 and PG13/JZ419 were concentrated, and viral RNAs were isolated for analysis by Northern blotting by using a radiolabeled probe that hybridized to the neo gene sequence, which is encoded by both the parent-type and the recombinant viral RNAs (Fig. 1). Northern analysis showed that parent-type virion contained a 5.3-kb viral RNA, whereas the virions released from PG13/JZ419 cells contained a viral RNA of 4.4 kb. Had a significant amount of recombinant RNAs been transcribed by the RNA Pol II and subsequently packaged into virions, 4.4-kb RNAs should be produced by PG13/JZ481. Analysis by a density photometer showed that the amount of the deleted fragments of JZ481 was <6% of the undeleted JZ481. The Northern analysis revealed that very little, if any, amount of deleted viral RNAs were transcribed in the helper cells (Fig. 1D) and that most deletions must have occurred during reverse transcription.
Determination of the relative rates of intramolecular recombination during minus-strand and plus-strand DNA synthesis. The frequency of recombination at the proviral level (DNA) is only 10-5 events/cell division (Table 2) (14). Flow cytometry and Northern analysis indicated that 99.9% of recombinations took place during reverse transcription. Retroviral reverse transcription includes the synthesis of minus-strand and plus-strand DNAs. Therefore, reverse transcriptase-promoted template switching may occur during minus-strand DNA synthesis and/or during plus-strand synthesis. A previous study showed that most, if not all, retroviral intermolecular recombinations between two different viral vectors occurred during minus-strand DNA synthesis (25). To study whether most intramolecular recombinations also occur during the minus-strand DNA synthesis, individual step 3 colonies of the JZ481-infected DNA cells were analyzed (Fig. 3, step 3). If recombination takes place during minus-strand DNA synthesis, since plus-strand DNA is made by using the minus-strand as a template, the resulting double-stranded viral DNAs will encode recombinant JZ481 on both strands. After integration into the host cell chromosome, the recombinant virus-infected target cell will grow to a green colony. If an intramolecular recombination takes place during plus-strand DNA synthesis, since the minus-strand DNA still carries the parental-type gfp, the resulting double-stranded viral DNA will be a heteroduplex with a portion of the minus strand looping out. When such a duplex integrates into host DNA and the cellular repair system cannot correct the mismatched sequences within the viral double-stranded DNA, subsequent cell division would result in two genotypically different daughter cells; one receives the parent-type provirus, and the other receives the recombinant provirus. While their progeny would form a single colony, it will have a mixed phenotype, with half clear cells and half green cells. The D17 cell line was chosen as target cell in the present study because it is unable to repair mismatches within the retroviral double-stranded DNA (22, 25). When neomycin-resistant colonies of JZ481-infected D17 cells were analyzed under a fluorescence microscope, only 2 of 244 green colonies examined were mixtures of green and clear cells (Table 1). In addition to recombination during plus-strand DNA synthesis, mix-colored colonies could be also resulted either from a mutation of the gfp gene during plus-strand DNA synthesis or from two separate infection events (25). Therefore, at least 99% of the retroviral intramolecular recombinations had occurred during minus-strand DNA synthesis by reverse transcriptase (Table 2).
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TABLE 2. Relative recombination rates during retroviral life cycle for JZ481
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To demonstrate JZ442 PPT+3'Hyg (Fig. 2C) also encoded two identical sequences, the 3' end of the plasmid of pJZ442 PPT+3'Hyg was sequenced. The sequences coincided with the structure predicted in Fig. 2C. The plasmid DNA of pJZ442 PPT+3'Hyg was used to transfect an amphotropic helper cell line, PA317 (15) (step 1). Virions from the cells can infect mouse cells. To eliminate the influence of deletion during transfection, viruses released from the transfected cells were used to infect a xenotropic helper cell line, PG13 derived from the mouse cell line NIH 3T3 (16). Viruses released from this xenotropic helper cell lines can infect the dog cell line D17 but not mouse cells such as PG13. This procedure ensures that there is only a single round of replication. After selection for hygromycin resistance, individual hygromycin-resistant colonies were examined under a fluorescence microscope. Seven well-separated green clones were isolated and used for further studies (step 2). The GFP-positive phenotype of these clones indicated that the cells encoded the gfp gene and that the two identical sequences had not yet recombined within the proviruses found in the green step 2 cells, since the gfp gene is located between the two identical sequences of the 290-bp 3' hyg sequences. Furthermore, the 3' end of proviruses from three step 2 clones were amplified and sequences, which coincided with the plasmid of pJZ442 PPT+3'Hyg. Therefore, in contrast to the report by Bowman et al., there could not be any deleted viral clones used in the present study. Virus released from step 2 cells were used to infect D17 cells, and the infected D17 cells were selected for hygromycin resistance. Individual hygromycin-resistant colonies were examined by fluorescence microscopy. The ratio of the number of clear plus mixed colonies to the number of total colonies was determined to be 0.9% ± 0.4% (Table 3), which is much lower than the deletion rate for JZ442+3'Hyg (62% ± 9%) but is similar to the rate of mutation for JZ442 (1.3% ± 0.4%), which did not contain any repeat sequences (Fig. 2A) (24). Therefore, although JZ442 PPT+3'Hyg viruses carried two 290 base repeats of identical sequence similar in structure to JZ442+3'Hyg, the rate of recombination between the two sequences was only 1% (0.9%/62%) of the rate of recombination for JZ442+3'Hyg. The only difference between the two vectors lies in the localization of the ppt and attR, in which JZ442+3'Hyg allows the generation of double-stranded viral DNA after the deletion of its minus-strand DNA but JZ442 PPT+3'Hyg does not. Therefore, this result is consistent with our conclusion that intramolecular recombinations occur during minus-strand DNA synthesis.
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TABLE 3. Analyses of JZ442 PPT + 3' Hyg on D17 cellsa
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Due to the presence of the identical 290-bp sequences in the JZ442 PPT+3'Hyg, during minus-strand DNA synthesis deletion between the two repeats should occur at a high frequency. Although the deleted minus-strand DNA could neither be used to synthesize the plus-strand DNA nor be integrated into the cellular chromosomal DNA, the deleted and unintegrated minus-strand DNA should be found in the Hirt section (9). To demonstrate that deletions within JZ442 PPT+3'Hyg occurred during minus-strand DNA synthesis, DNAs in the Hirt portion were isolated as described in Methods and Materials. Unintegrated viral DNAs were amplified by PCR with two primers. The first primer annealed to the hyg seqeunce upstream the 3' 290-bp end, whereas the second one annealed to the U3 region (Fig. 5A). The PCR product was resolved by electrophoresis, and two fragments were separated on an agarose gel (Fig. 5B). The 2.1-kb fragment represented the amplified sequence within the parent-type JZ442 PPT+3'Hyg, whereas the 0.5-kb fragment represented the sequence with the deletion between the two identical 290-bp within the JZ442 PPT+3'Hyg. A large portion of the unintegrated viral DNAs contained a deletion (Fig. 5B); however,<1% proviruses contained the deletion, indicating that most deleted DNA were not integrated into host chromosome.
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FIG. 5. PCR amplification of Hirt fractionation. (A) Structure of undeleted DNA and deleted minus-strand DNA of JZ442 PPT+3'Hyg. The arrows represent the primers used to amplify the Hirt fractionation DNA: Hygro 1685 (GCTTGTATGGAGCAGCAGACG) and U3 3469 (GCTGGACCGCATCTGG). (B) Electrophoresis of amplified fragments: line 1, 1-kb DNA ladder (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.); line 2, PCR fragment of Hirt fractionation DNA; line 3, PCR fragments of the step 3 clone 5C; and line 4, PCR fragment of pJZ442 PPT+3'Hyg.
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Although RNA Pol II can switch between RNA templates (5), the present study is the first to explore the potential effect of eucaryotic RNA Pol II on retroviral recombination. RNA recombination has been observed mostly in studies of RNA viruses that use RNA as their sole genetic material and utilize RNA-dependent RNA polymerases (6). In a prokaryotic system, end-to-end template switching by RNA polymerase has also been reported (18, 19); such template switching generates hybrid RNA molecules in an in vitro system. In an in vivo study, Birge and Low postulated a template-switching model for the generation of a recombinant RNA by a prokaryotic RNA polymerase (2). The present study demonstrates that, in our cell culture system, RNA Pol II does not promote any detectable RNA recombination events in a mammalian cell line (NIH 3T3).
A previous study shows that the frequency of recombination at the proviral level is exceedingly low (ca. 10-5 per cell division) (14). Hence, it must be the reverse transcriptase that causes the high incidence of recombination. In addition, we demonstrated that at least 99% intramolecular recombination occurred during minus-strand DNA synthesis. This conclusion contrasts with the report by Bowman et al. (3). The discrepancy might be attributed to the difference between MLV and spleen necrosis virus systems. However, this is very unlikely considering the universal mechanism of reverse transcription. The current model for plus-strand replacement (12, 13) proposed that plus-strand DNA synthesis is initially discontinuous (Fig. 6A), and a fragment of product DNA might be displaced by a continuous DNA synthesis (Fig. 6B). The displaced DNA fragment may then hybridize to the minus-strand DNA synthesized from the other molecule of viral RNA used as a template (Fig. 6C).
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FIG. 6. Current recombination models do not support any intramolecular recombination occurring during plus-strand DNA synthesis. (A) Model of plus-strand replacement recombination. Plus-strand DNA synthesis is initially discontinuous. (B) A fragment of product DNA might be displaced by continuous DNA synthesis. (C) The displaced DNA fragment may then hybridize to the minus-strand DNA synthesized from the other molecule of viral RNA used as the template. (D) The plus-strand primer DNA is displaced by subsequent upstream DNA synthesis. (E) The displaced fragment could not hybridize to the homologous regions intramolecular, because its original template has been occupied by already-synthesized plus-strand DNA. (F) The opposite minus-strand DNA is possibly single stranded. An undeleted minus-strand DNA and an intermolecular transfer of plus strong stop primer resulted in an undeleted provirus. (G) A deleted minus-strand DNA and an intermolecular transfer of plus strong stop primer resulted in a deleted provirus.
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The original plus-strand displacement model for intermolecular homologous recombination proposed that the displaced fragments are able to hybridize with the opposite minus-strand DNA (Fig. 6B and C). If the plus-strand primer somehow hybridized with an undeleted opposite minus-strand DNA, the resulting double-stranded DNA would be undeleted (Fig. 6F). If the primer hybridized to an opposite minus-strand DNA that had undergone deletion during minus-strand DNA synthesis (Fig. 6G), the double-stranded DNA would lack the gfp gene and would be able to integrate. Since this process required an intermolecular transfer of the plus strong stop DNA, the frequency should be very low (10, 11, 20). Since the deleted proviruses did not result from recombination during plus-strand DNA synthesis, colonies of the infected cells should exhibit a clear phenotype instead of a mixed one. The proviruses from two clear colonies were analyzed and found to contain a deletion of the ppt region, which should have resulted from a minus-strand deletion, followed by an intermolecular transfer of the plus strong DNA primer. One step 3 provirus from a mixed colony did not contained any deletion, but a mutation was detected in the open reading frame of the gfp gene, indicating that the mixed colony had not resulted from a plus-strand recombination either. This mutation probably occurred during plus-strand DNA synthesis. Therefore, structure of the step 3 proviruses did not support plus-strand intramolecular recombination.
In summary, neither our experimental observations nor the current plus-strand replacement model (12, 13) support any intramolecular recombination during plus-strand DNA synthesis.
This research was supported by Public Health Service research grant CA70407.
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