Abstract

We report the construction of three stable murine hybridomas that secrete monoclonal antibodies which recognize calf thymus DNA-dependent adenosinetriphosphatase A. All three of the antibodies react specifically with calf thymus ATPase A and the gene 44 protein from the bacteriophage T4 DNA-dependent ATPase. Each of the three anti-ATPase A antibodies appears to recognize a different epitope and none of the antibodies inhibit DNA-dependent ATP hydrolysis by ATPase A. Furthermore, one of the antibodies has been shown to react with two different preparations of HeLa cell DNA-dependent ATPases and a yeast DNA-dependent ATPase, all of which have been implicated in the enzymology of DNA replication. These findings provide strong evidence for the role of ATPase A in DNA replication. These observations lead us to conclude that, apart from the nucleotide binding sites, there are at least three epitopes common to both the bacteriophage and eukaryotic DNA-dependent ATPases that we have examined and that the different preparations of the eukaryotic ATPases contain the same DNA-dependent ATPase.

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