Two Widely Spaced Initiator Binding Sites Create an HMG1-Dependent Parvovirus Rolling-Hairpin Replication Origin
- 1 February 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 74 (3) , 1332-1341
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.74.3.1332-1341.2000
Abstract
Minute virus of mice (MVM) replicates via a linearized form of rolling-circle replication in which the viral nickase, NS1, initiates DNA synthesis by introducing a site-specific nick into either of two distinct origin sequences. In vitro nicking and replication assays with substrates that had deletions or mutations were used to explore the sequences and structural elements essential for activity of one of these origins, located in the right-end (5′) viral telomere. This structure contains 248 nucleotides, most-favorably arranged as a simple hairpin with six unpaired bases. However, a pair of opposing NS1 binding sites, located near its outboard end, create a 33-bp palindrome that could potentially assume an alternate cruciform configuration and hence directly bind HMG1, the essential cofactor for this origin. The palindromic nature of this sequence, and thus its ability to fold into a cruciform, was dispensable for origin function, as was the NS1 binding site occupying the inboard arm of the palindrome. In contrast, the NS1 site in the outboard arm was essential for initiation, even though positioned 120 bp from the nick site. The specific sequence of the nick site and an additional NS1 binding site which directly orients NS1 over the initiation site were also essential and delimited the inboard border of the minimal right-end origin. DNase I and hydroxyl radical footprints defined sequences protected by NS1 and suggest that HMG1 allows the NS1 molecules positioned at each end of the origin to interact, creating a distortion characteristic of a double helical loop.Keywords
This publication has 80 references indexed in Scilit:
- cis Requirements for the Efficient Production of Recombinant DNA Vectors Based on Autonomous ParvovirusesHuman Gene Therapy, 1999
- Architecture of the γδ Resolvase Synaptosome: Oriented Heterodimers Identify Interactions Essential for Synapsis and RecombinationCell, 1998
- Transposition of Phage Mu DNAPublished by Springer Nature ,1996
- DNA replication in the autonomous parvovirusesSeminars in Virology, 1995
- In vitro excision and replication of 5′ telomeres of minute virus of mice DNA from cloned palindromic concatemer junctionsVirology, 1992
- A molecular mechanism for combinatorial control in yeast: MCM1 protein sets the spacing and orientation of the homeodomains of an α2 dimerCell, 1992
- Mapping of a higher order protein-DNA complex: Two kinds of long-range interactions in λ attLCell, 1990
- The γδ resolvase induces an unusual DNA structure at the recombinational crossover pointCell, 1987
- DNA bending and its relation to nucleosome positioningJournal of Molecular Biology, 1985
- Cleavage of DNA with methidiumpropyl-EDTA-iron(II): reaction conditions and product analysesBiochemistry, 1984