DNA AMPLIFICATION OF ADENO-ASSOCIATED VIRUS AS A RESPONSE TO CELLULAR GENOTOXIC STRESS
- 1 June 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 48 (11) , 3123-3129
Abstract
We studied DNA amplification of helper virus-dependent parvoviruses [adeno-associated virus (AAV)] following genotoxic treatment of a number of mammalian cell lines from different species including primary, immortalized, and tumorigenic cells. All cell lines, either infected with AAV or transfected with parvoviral DNA, readily amplified AAV DNA in the absence of helper virus following treatment of cells with a wide variety of genotoxic agents like chemical carcinogens, UV, heat shock, and metabolic inhibitors of DNA replication or protein synthesis. In addition, we show that in the SV40-transformed Chinese hamster cell lines CO60 and CO631 carcinogen-induced AAV-DNA amplification may result in a complete AAV replication cycle giving rise to infections AAV progeny. Our results demonstrate that AAV DNA amplification induced by genotoxic agents is completely independent of the presence of viral helper functions. Because its induction is not restricted to a specific cell type or to a malignant phenotype, AAV DNA amplification may represent a marker for cellular genotoxic stress response.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Cloning of infectious adeno-associated virus genomes in bacterial plasmidsGene, 1983
- "Onion skin" replication of integrated polyoma virus DNA and flanking sequences in polyoma-transformed rat cells: termination within a specific cellular DNA segment.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1983