The origin of adenovirus DNA replication: minimal DNA sequence requirement in vivo.

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RESUMO

Adenovirus mini-chromosomes which contain two cloned, inverted adenovirus termini replicate in vivo when supplied with non-defective adenovirus as a helper. This system has been used to define the minimum cis acting DNA sequences required for adenovirus DNA replication in vivo. Deletions into each end of the adenovirus inverted terminal repeat (ITR) were generated with Bal31 exonuclease and the resulting molecules constructed into plasmids which contained two inverted copies of the deleted ITR separated by the bacterial neomycin phosphotransferase gene. To determine the effect of the deletion in vivo plasmids cleaved to expose the adenovirus termini were co-transfected with adenovirus type 2 DNA into tissue culture cells. The replicative ability of the molecules bearing adenovirus termini was assayed by Southern blotting of extracted DNA which had been treated with DpnI, a restriction enzyme which cleaves only methylated and therefore unreplicated, input DNA. Molecules containing the terminal 45 bp of the viral genome were fully active whereas molecules containing only 36 bp were in-active in this assay. Therefore sequences required for DNA replication are contained entirely within the terminal 45 bp of the viral genome. Thus, both the previously described highly conserved region (nucleotides 9-18) and the binding site for the cellular nuclear factor I (nucleotides 19-48) are essential for adenovirus DNA replication in vivo.

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