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. 1977 Jul;23(1):142-51.
doi: 10.1128/JVI.23.1.142-151.1977.

Adenovirus DNA-binding protein in cells infected with wild-type 5 adenovirus and two DNA-minus, temperature-sensitive mutants, H5ts125 and H5ts149

Adenovirus DNA-binding protein in cells infected with wild-type 5 adenovirus and two DNA-minus, temperature-sensitive mutants, H5ts125 and H5ts149

H S Ginsberg et al. J Virol. 1977 Jul.

Abstract

Studies have been done to characterize further H5ts125, an adenovirus type 5 conditionally lethal, temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant defective in initiation of DNA synthesis and to investigate whether the single-strand-specific DNA-binding (72,000 molecular weight) protein is coded by the mutated viral gene. When H5ts125-infected cells were labeled with [35S]methionine at 32 degrees C and then incubated without isotope at 39.5 degrees C, the mutant's nonpermissive temperature, the 72,000 molecular weight polypeptide was progressively degraded. Immunofluorescence examination of cells infected with wild-type virus, H5ts125, and H5ts149 (a second, unique DNA-minus mutant) showed that immunologically reactive DNA-binding protein was barely detectable in H5ts125-infected cells at 39.5 degrees C, whereas this protein was present in wild-type- and H5TS149-infected cells, that the protein made at 32 degrees C in H5ts125-infected cells lost its ability to bind specific DNA-binding protein antibody when the infected cells were shifted to 39.5 degrees C, and that if H5ts125-infected cells were shifted from the restrictive temperature to 32 degrees C, even in the presence of cycloheximide to stop protein synthesis, immunologically reactive DNA-binding protein reappeared.

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