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1.
DNA polymerase alpha-primase is known to be phosphorylated in human and yeast cells in a cell cycle-dependent manner on the p180 and p68 subunits. Here we show that phosphorylation of purified human DNA polymerase alpha-primase by purified cyclin A/cdk2 in vitro reduced its ability to initiate simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA replication in vitro, while phosphorylation by cyclin E/cdk2 stimulated its initiation activity. Tryptic phosphopeptide mapping revealed a family of p68 peptides that was modified well by cyclin A/cdk2 and poorly by cyclin E/cdk2. The p180 phosphopeptides were identical with both kinases. By mass spectrometry, the p68 peptide family was identified as residues 141 to 160. Cyclin A/cdk2- and cyclin A/cdc2-modified p68 also displayed a phosphorylation-dependent shift to slower electrophoretic mobility. Mutation of the four putative phosphorylation sites within p68 peptide residues 141 to 160 prevented its phosphorylation by cyclin A/cdk2 and the inhibition of replication activity. Phosphopeptide maps of the p68 subunit of DNA polymerase alpha-primase from human cells, synchronized and labeled in G1/S and in G2, revealed a cyclin E/cdk2-like pattern in G1/S and a cyclin A/cdk2-like pattern in G2. The slower-electrophoretic-mobility form of p68 was absent in human cells in G1/S and appeared as the cells entered G2/M. Consistent with this, the ability of DNA polymerase alpha-primase isolated from synchronized human cells to initiate SV40 replication was maximal in G1/S, decreased as the cells completed S phase, and reached a minimum in G2/M. These results suggest that the replication activity of DNA polymerase alpha-primase in human cells is regulated by phosphorylation in a cell cycle-dependent manner.  相似文献   

2.
Human cell extracts efficiently support replication of simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA in vitro, while mouse cell extracts do not. Since human DNA polymerase alpha-primase is the major species-specific factor, we set out to determine the subunit(s) of DNA polymerase alpha-primase required for this species specificity. Recombinant human, mouse, and hybrid human-mouse DNA polymerase alpha-primase complexes were expressed with baculovirus vectors and purified. All of the recombinant DNA polymerase alpha-primases showed enzymatic activity and efficiently synthesized the complementary strand on an M13 single-stranded DNA template. The human DNA polymerase alpha-primase (four subunits [HHHH]) and the hybrid DNA polymerase alpha-primase HHMM (two human subunits and two mouse subunits), containing human p180 and p68 and mouse primase, initiated SV40 DNA replication in a purified system. The human and the HHMM complex efficiently replicated SV40 DNA in mouse extracts from which DNA polymerase alpha-primase was deleted, while MMMM and the MMHH complex did not. To determine whether the human p180 or p68 subunit was required for SV40 DNA replication, hybrid complexes containing only one human subunit, p180 or p68, together with three mouse subunits (HMMM and MHMM) or three human subunits and one mouse subunit (MHHH and HMHH) were tested for SV40 DNA replication activity. The hybrid complexes HMMM and HMHH synthesized oligoribonucleotides in the SV40 initiation assay with purified proteins and replicated SV40 DNA in depleted mouse extracts. In contrast, the hybrid complexes containing mouse p180 were inactive in both assays. We conclude that the human p180 subunit determines host-specific replication of SV40 DNA in vitro.  相似文献   

3.
Human replication protein A (RPA; also known as human single-stranded DNA binding protein, or HSSB) is a multisubunit complex involved in both DNA replication and repair. While the role of RPA in replication has been well studied, its function in repair is less clear, although it is known to be involved in the early stages of the repair process. We found that RPA interacts with xeroderma pigmentosum group A complementing protein (XPAC), a protein that specifically recognizes UV-damaged DNA. We examined the effect of this XPAC-RPA interaction on in vitro simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA replication catalyzed by the monopolymerase system. XPAC inhibited SV40 DNA replication in vitro, and this inhibition was reversed by the addition of RPA but not by the addition of DNA polymerase alpha-primase complex, SV40 large tumor antigen, or topoisomerase I. This inhibition did not result from an interaction between XPAC and single-stranded DNA (ssDNA), or from competition between RPA and XPAC for DNA binding, because XPAC does not show any ssDNA binding activity and, in fact, stimulates RPA's ssDNA binding activity. Furthermore, XPAC inhibited DNA polymerase alpha activity in the presence of RPA but not in RPA's absence. These results suggest that the inhibitory effect of XPAC on DNA replication probably occurs through its interaction with RPA.  相似文献   

4.
The functional interaction of simian virus 40 (SV40) large tumor antigen (T antigen) with DNA polymerase alpha (pol alpha)-primase complex, human single-stranded DNA binding protein (HSSB), and DNA polymerase delta (pol delta) holoenzyme, which includes pol delta, activator I (also called replication factor C), and proliferating cell nuclear antigen, at the replication fork was examined using the purified components that support SV40 DNA replication. Dilution of reaction mixtures during RNA primer synthesis revealed that T antigen remained associated continuously with the fork, while the pol alpha-primase complex dissociated from the complex during oligoribonucleotide synthesis. T antigen unwound duplex DNA from the SV40 core origin at a rate of 200 base pairs/min. Pol alpha-primase complex inhibited the rate of the unwinding reaction, and HSSB, pol alpha, and primase were all required for this effect. These requirements are the same as those essential for DNA primase-catalyzed oligoribonucleotide synthesis (Matsumoto, T., Eki, T., and Hurwitz, J. (1990) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 87, 9712-9716). This result suggests that the pol alpha-primase complex interacts with T antigen and HSSB during the unwinding reaction to synthesize RNA primers and that the interaction decreases the rate of T antigen movement. While pol delta holoenzyme can elongate primed DNA chains at a rate of 400-600 nucleotides/min on singly primed phi X174 DNA, the rate of the leading strand synthesis catalyzed by pol delta holoenzyme in the SV40 replication system in vitro was about 200 nucleotides/min. This rate was similar to the unwinding rate catalyzed by T antigen. Thus, the rate of leading strand synthesis catalyzed by pol delta holoenzyme in vitro appears to be limited by the unwinding reaction catalyzed by T antigen.  相似文献   

5.
DNA polymerase alpha-primase consists of four subunits, p180, p68, p58, and p48, and comprises two essential enzymatic functions. To study the primase activity of the complex, we expressed cDNAs encoding for the human p58 and p48 subunits either as single proteins or together using Escherichia coli expression vectors. Co-expression of both primase subunits allowed the purification of a heterodimer in high yields that revealed stable primase activity. Purified recombinant p48 subunit showed enzyme activity, whereas purified p58 did not. In contrast to the heterodimer, the primase activity of p48 was unstable. The activity of p48 could be stabilized by the addition of the divalent cations Mg2+ and Mn2+ but not Zn2+. On a poly(dC) template the primase activity was hardly influenced by the monovalent cation potassium. However, by using poly(dT) as a template the recombinant p48 activity was sensitive to salt, whereas recombinant p58-p48 and the bovine DNA polymerase alpha-primase purified from thymus were less sensitive to the addition of monovalent cations. A complex of bacterially expressed primase and baculovirus-expressed p180 and p68 was assembled in vitro and shown to support replication of simian virus 40 DNA in a cell-free system.  相似文献   

6.
Physical interactions of simian virus 40 (SV40) large tumor (T) antigen with cellular DNA polymerase alpha-primase (Pol/Prim) and replication protein A (RPA) appear to be responsible for multiple functional interactions among these proteins that are required for initiation of viral DNA replication at the origin, as well as during lagging-strand synthesis. In this study, we mapped an RPA binding site in T antigen (residues 164 to 249) that is embedded within the DNA binding domain of T antigen. Two monoclonal antibodies whose epitopes map within this region specifically interfered with RPA binding to T antigen but did not affect T-antigen binding to origin DNA or Pol/Prim, ATPase, or DNA helicase activity and had only a modest effect on origin DNA unwinding, suggesting that they could be used to test the functional importance of this RPA binding site in the initiation of viral DNA replication. To rule out a possible effect of these antibodies on origin DNA unwinding, we used a two-step initiation reaction in which an underwound template was first generated in the absence of primer synthesis. In the second step, primer synthesis was monitored with or without the antibodies. Alternatively, an underwound primed template was formed in the first step, and primer elongation was tested with or without antibodies in the second step. The results show that the antibodies specifically inhibited both primer synthesis and primer elongation, demonstrating that this RPA binding site in T antigen plays an essential role in both events.  相似文献   

7.
The 21 S complex of enzymes for DNA synthesis in the combined low salt nuclear extract-post microsomal supernatant from HeLa cells [Malkas et al. (1990) Biochemistry 29:6362-6374] was purified by poly (ethylene glycol) precipitation, Q-Sepharose chromatography, Mono Q Fast Protein Liquid Chromatography (FPLC), and velocity gradient centrifugation. The procedure gives purified enzyme complex at a yield of 45%. The 21 S enzyme complex remains intact and functional in the replication of simian virus 40 DNA throughout the purification. Sedimentation analysis showed that the 21 S enzyme complex exists in the crude HeLa cell extract and that simian virus 40 in vitro DNA replication activity in the cell extract resides exclusively with the 21 S complex. The results of enzyme and immunological analysis indicate that DNA polymerase alpha-primase, a 3',5' exonuclease, DNA ligase I, RNase H, and topoisomerase I are associated with the purified enzyme complex. Denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the purified enzyme complex showed the presence of about 30 polypeptides in the size range of 300 to 15 kDa. Immunofluorescent imaging analysis, with antibodies to DNA polymerase alpha,beta and DNA ligase I, showed that polymerase alpha and DNA ligase I are localized to granular-like foci within the nucleus during S-phase. In contrast, DNA polymerase beta, which is not associated with the 21 S complex, is diffusely distributed throughout the nucleoplasm.  相似文献   

8.
DNA replication in eukaryotic cells is restricted to the S-phase of the cell cycle. In a cell-free replication model system, using SV40 origin-containing DNA, extracts from G1 cells are inefficient in supporting DNA replication. We have undertaken a detailed analysis of the subcellular localization of replication proteins and cell cycle regulators to determine when these proteins are present in the nucleus and therefore available for DNA replication. Cyclin A and cdk2 have been implicated in regulating DNA replication, and may be responsible for activating components of the DNA replication initiation complex on entry into S-phase. G1 cell extracts used for in vitro replication contain the replication proteins RPA (the eukaryotic single-stranded DNA binding protein) and DNA polymerase alpha as well as cdk2, but lack cyclin A. On localizing these components in G1 cells we find that both RPA and DNA polymerase alpha are present as nuclear proteins, while cdk2 is primarily cytoplasmic and there is no detectable cyclin A. An apparent change in the distribution of these proteins occurs as the cell enters S-phase. Cyclin A becomes abundant and both cyclin A and cdk2 become localized to the nucleus in S-phase. In contrast, the RPA-34 and RPA-70 subunits of RPA, which are already nuclear, undergo a transition from the uniform nuclear distribution observed during G1, and now display a distinct punctate nuclear pattern. The initiation of DNA replication therefore most likely occurs by modification and activation of these replication initiation proteins rather than by their recruitment to the nuclear compartment.  相似文献   

9.
The highly conserved DNA polymerase alpha-primase complex (pol-prism) is the only eukaryotic DNA polymerase that can initiate DNA synthesis de novo. It is required both for the initiation of DNA replication at chromosomal origins and for the discontinuous synthesis of Okazaki fragments on the lagging strand of the replication fork. The dual role of pol-prim makes it a likely target for mechanisms that control cell-cycle S-phase entry and progression.  相似文献   

10.
We have previously shown that replication in vitro of plasmids containing the Simian virus 40 (SV40) origin of replication is reduced when an extract of irradiated cells is used (Wang et al., Radiat. Res. 142, 169-175, 1995). We proposed that the observed reduction in the overall replication activity is due to a reduction in the efficiency of initiation events, and that it is caused by the induction or activation by ionizing radiation of a factor(s) that inhibits DNA replication in trans. Here, we extend these studies and provide evidence that the reduced replication activity of an extract prepared from irradiated cells is not the result of a nonspecific inactivation of proteins or of an increase in the requirement for SV40 large tumor antigen (TAg), the only noncellular protein required for in vitro DNA replication. Mixing experiments demonstrate the presence of a dominant inhibitory activity(ies) in the extract of irradiated cells that efficiently stalls replication in reactions assembled using extract of nonirradiated cells. The inhibitory activity is a stable, nondialyzable molecule. Studies of kinetics suggest that the inhibitory activity(ies) affects the initiation steps of DNA replication and acts, at least partly, by modifying TAg, the key initiation protein of SV40 ori DNA replication. It is likely that the same inhibitory activity(ies) regulates cellular DNA replication by modifying the cellular homologues of TAg. Purification and characterization of this inhibitory activity(ies) will contribute to our understanding of the mechanism developed by the cell to regulate DNA replication after exposure to ionizing radiation and will define a checkpoint operating in S phase. Genetic evidence for a checkpoint in S phase distinct from the checkpoints operating in G1 and G2 phase has been reported in yeast.  相似文献   

11.
DNA replication is a complicated process that is largely regulated during stages of initiation. The Siman Virus 40 in vitro replication system has served as an excellent model for studies of the initiation of DNA replication, and its regulation, in eukaryotes. Initiation of SV40 replication requires a single viral protein termed T-antigen, all other proteins are supplied by the host. The recent determination of the solution structure of the T-antigen domain that recognizes the SV40 origin has provided significant insights into the initiation process. For example, it has afforded a clearer understanding of origin recognition, T-antigen oligomerization, and DNA unwinding. Furthermore, the Simian virus 40 in vitro replication system has been used to study nascent DNA formation in the vicinity of the viral origin of replication. Among the conclusions drawn from these experiments is that nascent DNA synthesis does not initiate in the core origin in vitro and that Okazaki fragment formation is complex. These and related studies demonstrate that significant progress has been made in understanding the initiation of DNA synthesis at the molecular level.  相似文献   

12.
The cell cycle is driven by the sequential activation of a family of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK) in association with cyclins. In mammalian cells the timing of activation of cyclin A-associated kinase activity coincides with the onset of DNA synthesis in S-phase. Using in vitro replication of SV40 origin-containing DNA as a model system, we have analyzed the proteins associated with DNA during initiation of DNA replication in S-phase cell extracts. This analysis reveals that, in addition to replication initiation proteins, cyclin A and cdk2 are also specifically associated with DNA. The association of cyclin A and cdk2 with DNA during initiation is cell cycle regulated and occurs specifically in the presence of SV40 origin-containing plasmid and SV40 T antigen (the viral replication initiator protein). The interactions among proteins involved in initiation play an important role in DNA replication. We therefore investigated the ability of cyclin A and cdk2 to associate with replication initiation proteins. Under replication initiation conditions, cyclin A and cdk2 from S-phase extracts specifically associate with SV40 T antigen. Further, the interaction of cyclin A-cdk2 with SV40 T antigen is mediated via cyclin A, and purified recombinant cyclin A associates directly with SV40 T antigen. Taken together, our results suggest that cyclin A and cdk2 are components of the SV40 replication initiation complex, and that protein-protein interactions between cyclin A-cdk2 and T antigen may facilitate the association of cyclin A-cdk2 with the complex.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The cyclin-dependent kinase Cdk2 associates with cyclins A, D, and E and has been implicated in the control of the G1 to S phase transition in mammals. To identify potential Cdk2 regulators, we have employed an improved two-hybrid system to isolate human genes encoding Cdk-interacting proteins (Cips). CIP1 encodes a novel 21 kd protein that is found in cyclin A, cyclin D1, cyclin E, and Cdk2 immunoprecipitates. p21CIP1 is a potent, tight-binding inhibitor of Cdks and can inhibit the phosphorylation of Rb by cyclin A-Cdk2, cyclin E-Cdk2, cyclin D1-Cdk4, and cyclin D2-Cdk4 complexes. Cotransfection experiments indicate that CIP1 and SV40 T antigen function in a mutually antagonistic manner to control cell cycle progression.  相似文献   

15.
1. DNA polymerase alpha (pol alpha) isolated from Simian virus 40 (SV40)-transformed cells showed more than 3-fold higher specific activity than pol alpha from normal cells. The enzymes from untransformed and transformed cells also differed in molecular size, thermolability, sensitivity to inhibitors and specificity of template-primer utilization. 2. Western analysis using anti-Tag to probe both a crude cell homogenate and partially purified pol alpha from SV40 transformed cells showed multiple immunoreactive bands with different molecular sizes. 3. While alpha polymerases from both normal and transformed cells exhibited tightly associated primase activity, they showed different DNA binding affinities. 4. These data suggest that T antigen binding to pol alpha alters the initiation of DNA replication and/or the function of pol alpha in SV40-transformed cells, and that pol alpha from SV40-transformed human fibroblasts have different catalytic subunit characteristics than pol alpha from untransformed cells.  相似文献   

16.
17.
18.
Cyclin A-Cdk2 complexes bind to Skp1 and Skp2 during S phase, but the function of Skp1 and Skp2 is unclear. Skp1, together with F-box proteins like Skp2, are part of ubiquitin-ligase E3 complexes that target many cell cycle regulators for ubiquitination-mediated proteolysis. In this study, we investigated the potential regulation of cyclin A-Cdk2 activity by Skp1 and Skp2. We found that Skp2 can inhibit the kinase activity of cyclin A-Cdk2 in vitro, both by direct inhibition of cyclin A-Cdk2 and by inhibition of the activation of Cdk2 by cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK)-activating kinase phosphorylation. Only the kinase activity of Cdk2, not of that of Cdc2 or Cdk5, is reduced by Skp2. Skp2 is phosphorylated by cyclin A-Cdk2 on residue Ser76, but nonphosphorylatable mutants of Skp2 can still inhibit the kinase activity of cyclin A-Cdk2 toward histone H1. The F box of Skp2 is required for binding to Skp1, and both the N-terminal and C-terminal regions of Skp2 are involved in binding to cyclin A-Cdk2. Furthermore, Skp2 and the CDK inhibitor p21(Cip1/WAF1) bind to cyclin A-Cdk2 in a mutually exclusive manner. Overexpression of Skp2, but not Skp1, in mammalian cells causes a G1/S cell cycle arrest.  相似文献   

19.
Simian virus 40 (SV40)-infected CV1 cells transiently exposed to hypoxia show a burst of viral replication immediately after reoxygenation. DNA precursor incorporation and analysis of growing daughter strands by alkaline sedimentation demonstrated that SV40 DNA synthesis began with a lag of about 3 to 5 min after reoxygenation followed by a largely synchronous viral replication round. Viral RNA-DNA primers complementary to the SV40 origin region were not detectable before 3 min upon reoxygenation. A distinct form of circular closed, supercoiled SV40 DNA was detectable as soon as 3 min after reoxygenation but not under hypoxia. Sensitivity to the DNA nuclease Bal 31 and migration behavior in chloroquine-containing agarose gels suggested that this DNA species was highly underwound compared to other SV40 topoisomers and was probably related to the highly underwound form U DNA first described by Dean et al. (F. B. Dean, P. Bullock, Y. Murakami, C. R. Wobbe, L. Weissbach, and J. Hurwitz, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84:16-20, 1987), in vitro. 3'-OH ends of presumed RNA-DNA primers could be detected in form U by 3' end labeling with T7 polymerase. Addition of aphidicolin to the cells before reoxygenation led to a pronounced accumulation of form U DNA containing RNA-DNA primers. In vivo pulse-chase kinetic studies performed with aphidicolin-treated SV40-infected cells showed that form U is an initial intermediate of SV40 DNA replication which matures into higher-molecular-weight replication intermediates and into SV40 form I DNA after removal of the inhibitor. These results suggest that in vivo initiation of SV40 replication is arrested by hypoxia before origin unwinding and primer synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
phi 29 DNA replication starts at both DNA ends by a protein priming mechanism. The formation of the terminal protein-dAMP initiation complex is directed by the second nucleotide from the 3' end of the template. The transition from protein-primed initiation to normal DNA elongation has been proposed to occur by a sliding-back mechanism that is necessary for maintaining the sequences at the phi 29 DNA ends. Structure-function studies have been carried out in the phi 29 DNA polymerase. By site-directed mutagenesis of amino acids conserved among distantly related DNA polymerases we have shown that the N-terminal domain of phi 29 DNA polymerase contains the 3'-5' exonuclease activity and the strand-displacement capacity, whereas the C-terminal domain contains the synthetic activities (protein-primed initiation and DNA polymerization). Viral protein p6 stimulates the initiation of phi 29 DNA replication. The structure of the protein p6-DNA complex has been determined, as well as the main signals at the phi 29 DNA ends recognized by protein p6. The DNA binding domain of protein p6 has been studied. The results indicate that an alpha-helical structure located in the N-terminal region of protein p6 is involved in DNA binding through the minor groove. The phi 29 protein p5 is the single-stranded DNA binding (SSB) protein involved in phi 29 DNA replication, by binding to the displaced single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) in the replication intermediates. In addition, protein p5 is able to unwind duplex DNA. The properties of the phi 29 SSB-ssDNA complex are described. Using the four viral proteins, terminal protein, DNA polymerase, protein p6 and the SSB protein, it was possible to amplify the 19,285-bp phi 29 DNA molecule by a factor of 4000 after 1 h of incubation at 30 degrees C. The infectivity of the in vitro amplified DNA was identical to that of phi 29 DNA obtained from virions.  相似文献   

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