Abstract

An apparently full-length complementary DNA copy of in vitro polyadenylated MS2 RNA was synthesized with avian myeloblastosis virus RNA-dependent DNA polymerase. After the MS2 RNA template was removed from the complementary DNA strand with T 1 and pancreatic RNase digestion, the complementary DNA became a good template for the synthesis of double-stranded MS2 DNA with Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I. We then constructed molecular chimeras by inserting the double-stranded MS2 DNA into the PstI restriction endonuclease cleavage site of the E. coli plasmid pBR322 by means of the poly(dA)· poly(dT) tailing procedure. An E. coli transformant carrying a plasmid with a nearly full-length MS2 DNA insertion, called pMS2-7, was chosen for further study. Correlation between the restriction cleavage site map of pMS2-7 DNA and the cleavage map predicted from the primary structure of MS2 RNA, and nucleotide sequence analysis of the 5′ and 3′ end regions of the MS2 DNA insertion, showed that the entire MS2 RNA had been faithfully copied, and that, except for 14 nucleotides corresponding to the 5′-terminal sequence of MS2 RNA, the fulllength DNA copy of the viral genetic information had been inserted into the plasmid. Restriction endonuclease analysis of the chimera plasmid DNA also revealed the presence of an extra DNA insertion which was identified as the translocatable element IS1 ‡ ‡ Abbreviations used: IS, insertion sequence; dsDNA, double-stranded DNA; cDNA, complementary DNA; AMV, avian myeloblastosis virus. (see following paper).

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