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. 1980 Oct;36(1):41-9.
doi: 10.1128/JVI.36.1.41-49.1980.

Revertants of adenovirus type 12-transformed hamster cell line T637 as tools in the analysis of integration patterns

Revertants of adenovirus type 12-transformed hamster cell line T637 as tools in the analysis of integration patterns

D Eick et al. J Virol. 1980 Oct.

Abstract

Spontaneously arising morphological revertants of the adenovirus type 12 (Ad12)-transformed hamster cell line T637 had been previously isolated, and it had been demonstrated that in these revertants varying amounts of the integrated Ad12 genome were eliminated from the host genome. In this report, the patterns of persistence of the viral genome in the revertants were analyzed in detail. In some of the revertant cell lines, F10, TR3, and TR7, all copies of Ad12 DNA integrated in line T637 were lost. In lines TR1, -2, -4 to -6, -8 to -10, and -13 to -16, only the right-hand portion of one Ad12 genome was preserved; it consisted of the intact right segment of Ad12 DNA and was integrated at the same site as in line T637. In revertant lines G12, TR11, and TR12, one Ad12 DNA and varying parts of a second viral DNA molecule persisted in the host genome. These patterns of persistence of Ad12 DNA molecules in different revertants supported a model for a mode of integration of Ad12 DNA in T637 hamster cells in which multiple (20 to 22) copies of the entire Ad12 DNA were serially arranged, separated from each other by stretches of cellular DNA. The occurrence of such revertants demonstrated that foreign DNA sequences could not only be acquired but could also be lost from eucaryotic genomes. There was very little, if any, expression of Ad12-specific DNA sequences in the revertant lines TR7 and TR12. Moreover, Ad12 DNA sequences which were found to be undermethylated in line T637 were completely methylated in the revertant cell lines G12, TR11, TR12, and TR2. These findings were consistent with the absence of T antigen from the revertant lines reported earlier. Hence it was conceivable that the expression of integrated viral DNA sequences was somehow dependent on their positions in the cellular genome. In cell line TR637, the early segments of Ad12 DNA were expressed and undermethylated; conversely, in the revertant lines G12, TR11, TR12, and TR2, the same segments appeared to be expressed to a limited extent and were strongly methylated.

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