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Journal of Virology, September 1998, p. 7330-7340, Vol. 72, No. 9
Department of Microbiology and Immunology,
McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Received 13 February 1998/Accepted 10 June 1998
Polyomavirus large T antigen binds to multiple 5'-G(A/G)GGC-3'
pentanucleotide sequences in sites 1/2, A, B, and C within and
adjacent to the origin of viral DNA replication on the polyomavirus genome. We asked whether the binding of large T antigen to one of these
sites could influence binding to other sites. We discovered that
binding to origin DNA is substantially stronger at pH 6 to 7 than at pH
7.4 to 7.8, a range often used in DNA binding assays. Large T
antigen-DNA complexes formed at pH 6 to 7 were stable, but a fraction
of these complexes dissociated at pH 7.6 and above upon dilution or
during electrophoresis. Increased binding at low pH is therefore due at
least in part to increased stability of protein-DNA complexes, and
binding at higher pH values is reversible. Binding to fragments of
origin DNA in which one or more sites were deleted or inactivated by
point mutations was measured by nitrocellulose filter binding and DNase
I footprinting. The results showed that large T antigen binds
cooperatively to its four binding sites in viral DNA, suggesting that
the binding of this protein to one of these sites stabilizes its
binding to other sites via protein-protein contacts. Sites A, B, and C
may therefore augment DNA replication by facilitating the binding of
large T antigen to site 1/2 at the replication origin. ATP stabilized
large T antigen-DNA complexes against dissociation in the presence, but not the absence, of site 1/2, and ATP specifically enhanced protection against DNase I digestion in the central 10 to 12 bp of site 1/2, at
which hexamers are believed to form and begin unwinding DNA. We propose
that large T antigen molecules bound to these multiple sites on origin
DNA interact with each other to form a compact protein-DNA complex and,
furthermore, that ATP stimulates their assembly into hexamers at site
1/2 by a "handover" mechanism mediated by these protein-protein
contacts.
0022-538X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Polyomavirus Large T Antigen Binds Cooperatively to Its Multiple
Binding Sites in the Viral Origin of DNA Replication
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology and Immunology, McGill University, 3775 University St., Montreal H3A 2B4, Quebec, Canada. Phone: (514) 398-3921. Fax: (514)
398-7052. E-mail: nhacheson{at}microimm.mcgill.ca.
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