Abstract

We have pulse-labeled simian virus 40 (SV40)-infected monkey cells with 3H-thymidine ( 3H-dThd) and have hybridized the viral Okazaki pieces (rapidly labeled short DNA chains found during DNA replication, < 250 nucleotides long) and SV40 “intermediate sized” DNA (longer nascent strands, up to full replicon size) to the separated strands of two SV40 DNA restriction fragments, one lying to either side of the origin of bidirectional DNA replication. As much as 5 fold more Okazaki piece DNA hybridized to one strand than to the other strand of each restriction fragment. The excess Okazaki piece DNA was in the strands oriented 3′ → 5′ away from the replication origin (the strands which are expected to be synthesized discontinuously). Neither the duration of the labeling period nor the temperature of the cells during labeling significantly altered this hybridization asymmetry. With respect to the hybridization of “intermediate sized” DNA, a reverse asymmetry was detected (1.7 fold more radioactivity in the strands oriented 5′ → 3′ away from the origin for a 1 min pulse label at 22°C). The effects on these hybridization asymmetries of preincubating the infected cells with FdUrd prior to pulse-labeling were also determined. We also measured the size of the Okazaki pieces using gel electrophoresis under denaturing conditons after releasing the pieces from the filter-bound DNA strands. The size distribution of the Okazaki piece DNA from each strand was the same (∼ 145 nucleotides, weight average; 200–250 nucleotides, maximum size), indicating that the hybridization asymmetry resulted from a difference in the number rather than the size of the pieces in each strand. The simplest interpretation of our results is that SV40 DNA is synthesized semidiscontinuously: the strand with 3′ → 5′ orientation away from the origin is synthesized in short Okazaki pieces which are subsequently joined together, while the strand with 5′ → 3′ orientation away from the origin is synthesized continuously. Some models of two-strand discontinuous synthesis, however, cannot be ruled out.

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