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Query: UMLS:C0001486 (Adenovirus)
3,125 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We estimate that E. coli RNA polymerase is able to form stable, rifampicin-resistant, pre-intiation complexes with Adenovirus 2 DNA at three to six binding sites. The number of RNA chains initiated from such complexes has been determined form the incorporation of gamma-32P-ATP and -GTP at two rifampicin concentrations (7 mug/ml and 24 mug/ml) and after pre-incubation at either 25 or 37 degrees C. The total number of RNA chains initiated ranges from 2.6 per Ad 2 DNA molecule at a rifampicin concentration of 24 mug/ml and pre-incubation temperature of 25 degrees C, to 5.4 per Ad 2 DNA molecule at a rifampicin concentration of 7 mug/ml and pre-incubation temperature of 37 degrees C. Efficient initiation with GTP occurs only after pre-incubation at 37 degrees C whereas initiation with ATP is equally as efficient at either pre-incubation temperature. Promoters for initiation with ATP have been localized to the leftmost 58% of the Ad 2 DNA molecule, defined by the EcoR.RI restriction endonuclease fragment A; promoters for initiation with GTP are located on the remaining 42% of the Ad2 DNA molecule. It is likely that on Adenovirus 2 DNA each RNA chain is initiated from a unique binding site which constitutes a seperate promoter for E. coli RNA polymerase.
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PMID:In vitro transcription of adenovirus 2 DNA. II. Quantification and localization of promoters for E. coli RNA polymerase. 76 52

Using a direct binding assay based on photoaffinity labeling, we have studied the interaction of antigenic peptides with murine MHC class I molecules on living cells. Photoreactive derivatives were prepared by N-terminal amidation with iodo, 4-azido salicylic acid of the Kd restricted Plasmodium berghei circumsporozoite (P.b. CS) peptide 253-260 (YIPSAEKI) and the Db-restricted Adenovirus 5 early region 1A (Ad5 E1A) peptide 234-243 (SGPSNTPPEI). As assessed in functional competition experiments, both peptide derivatives retained the specific binding activity of the parental peptides for Kd or Dd, respectively. The P.b. CS photoprobe specifically labeled Kd molecules on P815 (H-2d) cells, but failed to label RMA (H-2b) cells. Conversely, the Ad5 E1A photoprobe specifically labeled Db molecules on RMA cells, but failed to label P815 cells. When the two photoprobes were tested on a panel of Con A-activated spleen cells expressing 10 different H-2 haplotypes, significant photoaffinity labeling was observed only on H-2d cells with the P.b. CS photoprobe and on H-2b cells with the Ad5 E1A photoprobe. Labeling of cell-associated Kd or Db molecules with the photoprobes was specifically inhibited by antigenic peptides known to be presented by the same class I molecule. Photoaffinity labeling of Kd with the P.b. CS photoprobe was used to study the dynamics of peptide binding on living P815 cells. Binding increased steadily with the incubation period (up to 8 h) at 37 degrees C and at ambient temperature, but was greatly reduced (greater than 95%) at 0 to 4 degrees C or in the presence of ATP synthesis inhibitors. The magnitude of the labeling was twofold higher at room temperature than at 37 degrees C. In contrast, binding to isolated Kd molecules in solution rapidly reached maximal binding, particularly at 37 degrees C. Dissociation of the photoprobe from either cell-associated or soluble Kd molecules was similar, with a half time of approximately 1 h at 37 degrees C, whereas the complexes were long-lived at 4 degrees C in both instances.
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PMID:Interaction of antigenic peptides with MHC class I molecules on living cells studied by photoaffinity labeling. 173 23

An extract from Adenovirus type 4 infected HeLa cells was fractionated by ion-exchange and DNA affinity chromatography. One fraction, which bound tightly to single stranded DNA, contained predominantly a protein of apparent molecular weight 65,000 and three less abundant proteins. Immunological cross-reactivity with adenovirus type 2 proteins confirmed the presence of preterminal protein and indicated that the abundant species was the virus coded DNA binding protein. This fraction contained an aphidicolin resistant DNA polymerase activity and in the presence of a linearised plasmid containing the adenovirus type 4 origin of DNA replication efficient transfer of dCMP onto preterminal protein, indicative of initiation, was observed. Furthermore, addition of all four deoxyribonucleotide triphosphates and an ATP regenerating system resulted in the elongation of initiated molecules to generate plasmid molecules covalently attached to preterminal protein. Adenovirus type 4 DNA binding protein was extensively purified from crude adenovirus-4 infected HeLa extract by immunoaffinity chromatography using a monoclonal antibody raised against adenovirus type 2 DNA binding protein. A low level of initiation of DNA replication was detected in the fraction depleted of DNA binding protein but activity was restored by addition of purified DNA binding protein. DNA binding protein therefore plays an important role in the initiation of Ad4 DNA replication.
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PMID:Replication of adenovirus type 4 DNA by a purified fraction from infected cells. 182 16

Adenovirus infection induces a large increase in the DNA binding activity of a cellular transcription factor that is utilized by the viral E2 promoter and termed E2F. Using cell-free extracts, we have developed an assay for the in vitro activation of DNA binding activity of E2F. E2F activity is undetectable in HeLa extracts but upon incubation with a fraction from adenovirus-infected cells, there is an ATP-dependent increase in E2F DNA binding activity. This increase does not occur using an equivalent fraction from dl312 (E1A-)-infected cells. Incubation of E2F with phosphatase inactivates E2F binding activity. Incubation of the phosphatase-inactivated E2F with an infected cell fraction restores E2F activity as does incubation with a known protein kinase. In contrast, incubation with an extract from mock-infected cells does not restore activity. We conclude that the DNA binding activity of E2F is regulated by phosphorylation in an E1A-dependent manner.
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PMID:Phosphorylation-dependent activation of the adenovirus-inducible E2F transcription factor in a cell-free system. 252 56

Adenovirus type 2 cores can function effectively as templates in an in vitro replication system. Viral DNA replication assays using cores as templates do not differ in their requirements to the well characterized assays using DNA-complex templates, i.e. there is a dependence on terminal protein precursor (pTP), DNA polymerase and DNA binding protein and the assay is greatly stimulated by certain host transcription factors. The products of initiation and limited elongation are easily distinguishable and, in the system described, there is specific proteolysis of the pTP adducts as a function of the adenovirus-coded protease, present in the nuclear extracts from infected cells, or the core templates. Substitution of Mn2+ ions for Mg2+ ions in the replication assay has a dramatic effect on the nature of the replication events, in most cases resulting in the stimulation of initiation without elongation. Similar results can be achieved by utilizing subviral particles as templates, obtained by dialysis of purified adenovirus in a hypotonic buffer at pH 6.4. Restriction enzyme analysis of the replicated products confirmed that DNA synthesis proceeds from the adenovirus termini using both the core and subviral templates. By adding an ATP-regenerating system elongation can be further stimulated, particularly in the case of the subviral templates. Quantification of nucleotide incorporation into the appropriate restriction fragments indicates that for the subviral templates replication can proceed for at least 2000 to 3000 bases from either terminus. These results suggest that the adenovirus genome is packaged in the virion in a conformation readily available for at least the initial replication events. Such a conformation might also be appropriate for early transcription.
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PMID:Adenovirus subviral particles and cores can support limited DNA replication. 260 37

Several in vitro DNA replication systems were employed to characterize the ATP dependency of adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) DNA replication. Ad5 DNA synthesis in isolated nuclei, representing the elongation of nascent DNA chains, was slightly ATP dependent. Reduction of the ATP concentration from the optimum (8 mM) to the endogenous value (0.16 microM) reduced Ad5 DNA replication only to 70%. No change in the pattern of replication was observed as indicated by the analysis of replicative intermediates using agarose gel electrophoresis. ATP could be replaced by dATP, but not by GTP or other nucleoside triphosphates. By contrast, cellular DNA replication in isolated nuclei from HeLa cells was reduced to 12% by the omission of ATP. These differences could not be explained by different ATP pools or by effects of ATP on dNTP pools. Cellular DNA replication in contrast to viral DNA replication was sensitive to low concentrations of adenosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate). Inhibition by this ATP analog was competitive with ATP (Ki = 0.4 mM). Adenovirus DNA replication by DNA-free nuclear extracts, representing initiation plus elongation (Challberg and Kelly, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 76, 655-659, 1979), exhibited a nearly absolute requirement for ATP. ATP could be substituted not only by dATP, but also by GTP and dGTP and to a lesser extent by pyrimidine triphosphates. Similar results were found when the formation of a covalent complex between dCTP and the precursor terminal protein was studied. This reaction is essential for the initiation of Ad5 DNA replication. The results indicate that different ATP-requiring functions are employed during the initiation and elongation stages of adenovirus DNA replication.
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PMID:The ATP requirements of adenovirus type 5 DNA replication and cellular DNA replication. 682 46

Recently, a DNA binding protein 'PUF' was purified that binds to a poly-pyrimidine rich element in the human c-myc promoter. Cloning of the corresponding gene surprisingly identified this putative transcription factor as isoform B of the enzyme nucleoside diphosphate kinase (NDPK-B) [Postel et al. (1993) Science, 261, 478-480], the product of the potential metastasis suppressor gene nm23-H2. Using different recombinant NDP kinases, we demonstrate by electrophoretic mobility shift analysis (EMSA) that the NDP kinase DNA binding properties are predominantly observed with human isoform B. Unlike typical DNA binding proteins that are involved in transcriptional regulation, binding occurs to single-stranded DNA rather than to a double-stranded oligonucleotide. As a consequence, complexes of single-stranded DNA and NDPK-B are generated from double-stranded oligonucleotide hybrids in an ATP independent manner. In addition to the c-myc element, NDPK-B is binding in vitro to a variety of poly-pyrimidine rich sequences including dC or dT homo-oligomers, (CT)n dinucleotide repeats, the initiator region of the Adenovirus major late promoter and even poly-pyrimidine rich RNAs. The possible consequences of these findings in understanding the multiple roles of NDP kinase are discussed.
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PMID:A human NDP-kinase B specifically binds single-stranded poly-pyrimidine sequences. 747 28

Adenovirus DNA binding protein is a multifunctional protein essential for viral DNA replication. To investigate the role of the DNA binding protein in this process its interaction with partial DNA duplexes was examined. Duplex regions of DNA, created when a short DNA strand is annealed to its complementary sequence present in the single stranded form of M13 phage DNA, were efficiently unwound by DNA binding protein in a reaction that required neither ATP nor MgCl2. The unwinding activity of DNA binding protein was reduced by conditions which increased the stability of DNA duplexes. DNA unwinding by DNA binding protein was highly co-operative and required the single stranded DNA to be completely coated with the protein. Completely double stranded DNA could also be unwound by DNA binding protein but this reaction was sensitive to the G+C content of the DNA and could only be observed with relatively short DNA duplexes up to 45 base pairs in length. When these short double stranded DNA molecules contained binding sites for the transcription factors NFI and NFIII addition of the cognate factor blocked DNA binding protein mediated unwinding of the particular DNA duplex. Cleavage of DNA binding protein with chymotrypsin and isolation of the 39,000 molecular weight C-terminal fragment indicated that the unwinding activity was located in this domain of the protein. In support of this contention a monoclonal antibody, which had previously been mapped to this region, specifically inhibited the DNA unwinding activity. These activities of DNA binding protein are likely to be involved in DNA replication, where the destabilisation of DNA duplexes could be important both during initiation and elongation.
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PMID:Adenovirus DNA binding protein: helix destabilising properties. 813 13

Adenovirus type 2 E1A gene product induces nuclear degeneration and apoptosis of human epithermoid carcinoma cell line MA1 within 72 h after its expression. Western-blot analysis revealed that the level of topoisomerase II alpha begins to decrease posttranscriptionally within 36 h after E1A expression, preceding the onset of DNA fragmentation. The decrease of topoisomerase II alpha was suppressed in the MA1 derivative E1B19k or Bcl-2 expressing cell lines that refractory to E1A-induced apoptosis. Topoisomerase II alpha of the nuclear matrix or prepared by immunoprecipitation was degraded more efficiently in the S10 extract prepared from MA1 cells treated with DEX for 42 h than in the extract from untreated MA1 cells in an ATP and ubiquitin dependent manner. These data suggest that degradation of topoisomerase II alpha is a key event that destines cells to apoptosis, and is catalyzed by the ubiquitin proteolysis pathway that is activated during the latent phase of E1A-induced apoptosis.
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PMID:[Degradation of topoisomerase II alpha precedes nuclei degeneration during adenovirus E1A-induced apoptosis and is mediated by the activation of the ubiquitin dependent proteolysis system]. 874 74

Adenovirus-mediated transfer of cDNA encoding the chicken skeletal muscle sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA1) yielded selective expression in cultured chick embryo cardiac myocytes under control of a segment (-268 base pair) of the cell-specific cardiac troponin T (cTnT) promoter or nonselective expression in myocytes and fibroblasts under control of a constitutive viral [cytomegalovirus (CMV)] promoter. Under optimal conditions nearly all cardiac myocytes in culture were shown to express transgenic SERCA1 ATPase. Expression was targeted to intracellular membranes and was recovered in subcellular fractions with a pattern identical to that of the endogenous SERCA2a ATPase. Relative to control myocytes, transgenic SERCA1 expression increased up to four times the rates of ATP-dependent (and thapsigargin-sensitive) Ca2+ transport activity of cell homogenates. Although the CMV promoter was more active than the cTnT promoter, an upper limit for transgenic expression of functional enzyme was reached under control of either promoter by adjustment of the adenovirus plaque-forming unit titer of infection media. Cytosolic Ca2+ concentration transients and tension development of whole myocytes were also influenced to a similar limit by transgenic expression of SERCA1 under control of either promoter. Our experiments demonstrate that a cell-specific protein promoter in recombinant adenovirus vectors yields highly efficient and selective transgene expression of a membrane-bound and functional enzyme in cardiac myocytes.
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PMID:Cell-specific promoter in adenovirus vector for transgenic expression of SERCA1 ATPase in cardiac myocytes. 953 95


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