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The phosphorylation of a normal cellular protein of molecular weight 34,000 (34K) is enhanced in Rous sarcoma virus-transformed chicken embryo fibroblasts apparently as a direct consequence of the phosphotransferase activity of the Rous sarcoma virus-transforming protein pp60src. We have prepared anti-34K serum by using 34K purified from normal fibroblasts to confirm that the transformation-specific phosphorylation described previously occurs on a normal cellular protein and to further characterize the nature of the protein. In this communication, we also show that the phosphorylation of 34K is also increased in cells transformed by either Fujinami or PRCII sarcoma virus, two recently characterized avian sarcoma viruses whose transforming proteins, although distinct from pp60src, are also associated with phosphotransferase activity. Moreover, comparative fingerprinting of tryptic phosphopeptides shows that the major site of phosphorylation of 34K is the same in all three cases.
Mol Cell Biol 1981 Jan
PMID:The same normal cell protein is phosphorylated after transformation by avian sarcoma viruses with unrelated transforming genes. 610 Sep 59

The vast majority of plus strands synthesized in quail cells acutely infected with avian sarcoma virus were subgenomic in size, generally less than 3 kilobases (kb). A series of discrete species could be identified after agarose gel electrophoresis by annealing with various complementary DNAs, indicating specificity in the initiation and termination of plus strands. The first plus strand to appear (within 2 h postinfection) was similar in length to the long redundancy at the ends of linear DNA (0.35 kb), and it annealed with complementary DNAs specific for the 3' and 5' termini of viral RNA (Varmus et al., J. Mol. Biol. 120:50-82, 1978). Several subgenomic plus-strand fragments (0.94, 1.38, 2.3, and 3.4 kb) annealed with these reagents. At least the 0.94- and 1.38-kb strands were located at the same end of linear DNA as the 0.35-kb strand, indicating that multiple specific sites for initiation were employed to generate strands which overlapped on the structural map. We were unable to detect RNA liked to plus strands isolated as early as 2.5 h postinfection; thus, the primers must be short (fewer than 50 to 100 nucleotides), rapidly removed, or not composed of RNA. To determine whether multiple priming events are a general property of retroviral DNA synthesis in vivo, we also examined plus strands of mouse mammary tumor virus DNA in chronically infected rat cells after induction of RNA and subsequent DNA synthesis with dexamethasone. In this case, multiple, discrete subgenomic DNA plus strands were not found when the same methods applied to avian sarcoma virus DNA were used; instead, the plus strands present in the linear DNA of mouse mammary tumor virus fell mainly into two classes: (i) strands of ca. 1.3 kb which appeared early in synthesis and were similar in size and genetic content to the terminally repeated sequence in linear DNA; and (ii) plus strands of the same length as linear DNA. A heterogeneous population of other strands diminished with time, was not found in completed molecules, and was probably composed of strands undergoing elongation. These two retroviruses thus appear to differ with respect to both the number of priming sites used for the synthesis of plus strands and the abundance of full-length plus strands. On the other hand the major subgenomic plus strand of mouse mammary tumor virus DNA (1.3 kb) is probably the functional homolog of a major subgenomic plus strand of avian sarcoma virus DNA (0.35 kb). The significance of this plus strand species is discussed in the context of current models which hold that it is used as a template for the completion of the minus strand, thereby generating the long terminal redundancy.
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PMID:Synthesis of plus strands of retroviral DNA in cells infected with avian sarcoma virus and mouse mammary tumor virus. 626 Sep 68

Recovered avian sarcoma viruses are recombinants between transformation-defective mutants of Rous sarcoma virus and the chicken cellular gene homologous to the src gene of Rous sarcoma virus. We have constructed and analyzed molecular clones of viral deoxyribonucleic acid from recovered avian sarcoma virus and its transformation-competent progenitor, the Schmidt-Ruppin A strain of Rous sarcoma virus. A 2.0-megadalton EcoRI fragment containing the entire src gene from each of these clones was subcloned and characterized. These fragments were also used as probes to isolate recombinant phage clones containing the cellular counterpart of the viral src gene, termed cellular src, from a lambda library of chicken deoxyribonucleic acid. The structure of cellular src was analyzed by restriction endonuclease mapping and electron microscopy. Restriction endonuclease mapping revealed extensive similarity between the src regions of Rous sarcoma virus and recovered avian sarcoma virus, but striking differences between the viral src's and cellular src. Electron microscopic analysis of heteroduplexes between recovered virus src and cellular src revealed a 1.8-kilobase region of homology. In the cellular gene, the homologous region was interrupted by seven nonhomologous regions which we interpret to be intervening sequences. We estimate the minimum length of cellular src to be about 7.2 kilobases. These findings have implications concerning the mechanism of formation of recovered virus src and possibly other cell-derived retrovirus transforming genes.
Mol Cell Biol 1981 Nov
PMID:Comparison between the viral transforming gene (src) of recovered avian sarcoma virus and its cellular homolog. 628 13

The primary translation product of the PRC II avian sarcoma virus genome is a protein of 105,000 daltons (P105), and we have previously shown that approximately 50% of the P105 molecules are converted to molecules of 110,000 daltons (P110) by posttranslational modification. Fractionation of PRC II-infected cells showed that P105 was contained primarily in a nonionic detergent-soluble compartment, whereas P110 partitioned almost exclusively with a nonionic detergent-insoluble or crude cytoskeletal fraction. The tyrosine-specific protein kinase activity previously observed in immunoprecipitates which presumably contained both P110 and P105 was found predominantly in the P110-containing immunoprecipitates made from the cytoskeletal fraction and was essentially absent from the P105-containing immunoprecipitates prepared from the soluble fraction. Individual analysis of 32P-labeled P110 and P105 prepared by this fractionation technique revealed that P110 contained more phosphotyrosine per mole of protein than did P105. Examination of the tryptic peptide maps of 32P-labeled P110 and P105 suggested that the additional phosphotyrosine in P110 resulted from phosphorylation at discrete sites within the protein. From these experiments, we conclude that PRC II-infected cells contain two discrete forms, P105 and P110, of the transforming protein and that each of these proteins exhibits distinct structural and functional characteristics.
Mol Cell Biol 1982 Aug
PMID:Two structurally and functionally different forms of the transforming protein of PRC II avian sarcoma virus. 629 Aug 71

We examined the fate of DNA microinjected into nuclei of cultured mammalian cells. The sequence composition and the physical form of the vector carrying the selectable gene affected the efficiency of DNA-mediated transformation. Introduction of sequences near the simian virus 40 origin of DNA replication or in the long terminal repeat of avian sarcoma provirus into a recombinant plasmid containing the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene. (pBR322/HSV-tk) enhanced the frequency of transformation of LMtk- and RAT-2tk- cells to the TK+ phenotype 20- to 40-fold. In cells receiving injections of only a few plasmid DNA molecules, the transformation frequency was 40-fold higher after injection of linear molecules than after injection of supercoiled molecules. By controlling the number of gene copies injected into a recipient cell, we could obtain transformants containing a single copy or as many as 50 to 100 copies of the selectable gene. Multiple copies of the transforming gene were not scattered throughout the host genome but were integrated as a concatemer at one or a very few sites in the host chromosome. Independent transformants contained the donated genes in different chromosomes. The orientation of the gene copies within the concatemer was not random; rather, the copies were organized as tandem head-to-tail arrays. By analyzing transformants obtained by coinjecting two vectors which were identical except that in one a portion of the vector was inverted, we were able to conclude that the head-to-tail concatemers were generated predominantly by homologous recombination. Surprisingly, these head-to-tail concatemers were found in transformants obtained by injecting either supercoiled or linear plasmid DNA. Even though we demonstrated that cultured mammalian cells contain the enzymes for ligating two DNA molecules very efficiently irrespective of the sequences or topology at their ends, we found that even linear plasmid DNA was recruited into the concatemer by homologous recombination.
Mol Cell Biol 1982 Nov
PMID:Patterns of integration of DNA microinjected into cultured mammalian cells: evidence for homologous recombination between injected plasmid DNA molecules. 629 98

The nucleotide sequences in the long terminal repeat of avian sarcoma virus that are recognized in vitro by HeLa cell RNA polymerase II have been identified. For this purpose, various 5' and 3' deletions were introduced into a cloned long terminal repeat fragment. The effects of these deletions on transcription initiation in HeLa whole-cell extracts were then studied. Three specific transcripts have been identified. The major transcript is initiated at nucleotide +1 (relative to the cap site). Deletion of the upstream sequence between -299 and -55 has no effect on the level of transcription from this start site, whereas deletion of the sequence downstream of -14 drastically reduces the levels of transcription. In contrast, deletion of the sequence downstream from the TATA box has no effect on the initiation or efficiency of synthesis of the two minor RNA species, which are initiated at around nucleotides -260 and -105. The transcription of these RNA products, however, is abolished by an upstream deletion between -299 and -55. These results suggest that HeLa cell RNA polymerase II recognizes in vitro more than one promoter site present in the long terminal repeat of the avian sarcoma virus genome and defines the sequences required for initiation of the major transcript.
Mol Cell Biol 1983 May
PMID:Localization of active promoters for eucaryotic RNA polymerase II in the long terminal repeat of avian sarcoma virus DNA. 630 47

The regulatory elements present in the long terminal repeat (LTR) of avian sarcoma virus DNA were analyzed by recombinant DNA techniques coupled with DNA-mediated gene transfer in avian as well as mammalian cells. For this purpose, the neomycin resistance gene from transposon Tn5 was inserted downstream from the avian sarcoma virus LTR, and the recombinant plasmid DNA was introduced into cells by the calcium phosphate technique. Cells resistant to the drug G-418 were selected. Analysis of the RNA transcripts made in vivo in these transformants indicated that initiation and termination of the transcripts occurred in the LTR sequences. Deletions were then introduced into the LTR, and their effect on transcription was also studied. These results allowed us to identify a strong regulatory sequence between nucleotides -299 and -114 in the LTR of avian sarcoma virus.
Mol Cell Biol 1983 Nov
PMID:An upstream regulatory domain of avian tumor virus long terminal repeat is required for the expression of a procaryotic neomycin gene in eucaryotic cells. 631 77

An uninterrupted avian sarcoma viral genome terminated by viral long terminal repeat sequences was cloned into a pBR322 plasmid. After introduction into a cultured avian cell, transcription of either the circular plasmid molecule or one linearized within the pBR322 sequences could initiate and terminate at long terminal repeat sequences, yielding full-sized viral RNA. A plasmid DNA molecule linearized by cleavage within the viral pol gene, on the other hand, would have to undergo ligation to yield full-sized viral RNA. Microinjection of each of these three types of DNA into the nuclei of quail cells promoted the release of similar virus titers, indicating that the plasmid DNA cleaved within the viral pol gene had been efficiently and accurately ligated. When plasmid DNA was transfected into quail cells, circular and pBR322-cleaved molecules directed the synthesis of similar virus titers, indicating that they were similarly taken up and utilized by the cells. Compared with these results, plasmid DNA cleaved within the pol gene was reduced in activity over 95% after transfection. This reduction did not result from inefficient ligation but from the generation of mutations (of limited size) during ligation of the transfected molecules. Mutations were not observed after microinjection even into the cytoplasm. Consistent with these findings, transfected DNA termini were found to be joined regardless of their structure, whereas ligation after microinjection required that single-stranded protruding DNA termini be complementary.
Mol Cell Biol 1984 Feb
PMID:Differences in intracellular DNA ligation after microinjection and transfection. 632 56

We have shown previously that the membrane association of the src proteins of recovered avian sarcoma viruses (rASVs) 1702 (56 kilodaltons) and 157 (62.5 kilodaltons), whose size variations occur within 8 kilodaltons of the amino terminus, is salt sensitive and that, in isotonic salt, these src proteins fractionate as soluble cytoplasmic proteins. In contrast, wild-type Rous sarcoma virus pp60src behaves as an integral plasma membrane protein in cellular fractionation studies and shows prominent membrane interaction by immunofluorescence microscopy. In this study we have examined the distribution of these size-variant src proteins between free and complexed forms, their subcellular localization by immunofluorescence microscopy, and their ability to effect several transformation-related cell properties. Glycerol gradient sedimentation of extracts from cells infected either with rASV 1702 or rASV 157 showed that soluble src proteins of these viruses were distributed between free and complexed forms as has been demonstrated for wild-type Rous sarcoma virus pp60src. Pulse-chase studies with rASV pp60src showed that, like wild-type Rous sarcoma virus pp60src, it was transiently found in a complexed form. Indirect immunofluorescence showed that size-variant pp60src proteins are localized in adhesion plaques and regions of cell-to-cell contact in rASV 1702- or 157-infected cells. This result is in contrast with the generalized localization of pp60src in plasma membranes of control rASV-infected cells which produce pp60src. Chicken embryo fibroblasts infected by rASVs 1702 and 157 display a partial-transformation phenotype with respect to (i) transformation-related morphology, (ii) cell surface membrane changes, and (iii) retained extracellular fibronectin. It is possible that the induction of a partial-transformation phenotype may be the result of the unique interaction of the src proteins encoded by these viruses with restricted areas of the plasma membrane.
Mol Cell Biol 1984 Mar
PMID:Size-variant pp60src proteins of recovered avian sarcoma viruses interact with adhesion plaques as peripheral membrane proteins: effects on cell transformation. 632 79

The transforming gene of the avian sarcoma virus CT10 encodes a fusion protein (p47gag-crk or v-Crk) containing viral Gag sequences fused to cellular sequences consisting primarily of Src homology regions 2 and 3 (SH2 and SH3 sequences). Here we report a novel function of v-Crk in the mammalian pheochromocytoma cell line, PC12, whereby stable expression of v-Crk induces accelerated differentiation, as assessed by induction of neurites following nerve growth factor (NGF) or basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) treatment compared with the effect in native PC12 cells. Surprisingly, however, these cells also develop extensive neurite processes after epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulation, an event which is not observed in native PC12 cells. Following EGF or NGF stimulation of the v-CrkPC12 cells, the v-Crk protein itself became tyrosine phosphorylated within 1 min. Moreover, in A431 cells or TrkA-PC12 cells, which overexpress EGF receptors and TrkA, respectively, a GST-CrkSH2 fusion protein was indeed capable of binding these receptors in a phosphotyrosine-dependent manner, suggesting that v-Crk can directly couple to receptor tyrosine kinase pathways in PC12 cells. In transformed fibroblasts, v-Crk binds to specific tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins of p130 and paxillin. Both of these proteins are also complexed to v-Crk in PC12 cells, as evidenced by their coprecipitation with v-Crk in detergent lysates, suggesting that common effector pathways may occur in both cell types. However, whereas PC12 cellular differentiation can occur solely by overexpression of the v-Src or oncogenic Ras proteins, that induced by v-Crk requires a growth factor stimulatory signal, possibility in a two-step process.
Mol Cell Biol 1994 Mar
PMID:Expression of the v-crk oncogene product in PC12 cells results in rapid differentiation by both nerve growth factor- and epidermal growth factor-dependent pathways. 750 49


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