The simian-virus-40 large-tumor antigen in replicating viral chromatin. A salt-resistant protein-DNA interaction
- PMID: 6305657
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1983.tb07530.x
The simian-virus-40 large-tumor antigen in replicating viral chromatin. A salt-resistant protein-DNA interaction
Abstract
The large tumor antigen (T antigen) is a genome regulation protein, coded by simian virus 40, that binds with high affinity to specific binding sites on viral DNA. The specifically bound T antigen is released from these sites in 0.2-0.3 M NaCl. Immunoprecipitation techniques were used to show that T antigen also dissociates in 0.2-0.3 M NaCl from mature viral chromatin but not from replicating viral chromatin. In fact, a considerable fraction of T antigen remains associated with replicating chromatin at NaCl concentrations as high as 1.2 M NaCl when most chromatin proteins, including histones, dissociate. However, T antigen binding to both replicating DNA and mature DNA is sensitive to intercalating drugs such as caffeine and ethidium bromide. We consider the possibility that the unexpectedly tight binding of T antigen to replicating DNA is related to the function that T antigen performs during viral DNA replication.
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