Abstract

Using an in vitro system for polyoma DNA synthesis from polyoma-infected mouse BALB/3T3 cells, we have shown that short pulses of radioactively labeled deoxynucleoside triphosphates are incorporated into viral replicative intermediates. Upon denaturation, the pulse-labeled replicative intermediates yield two size classes of growing DNA chains, namely a heterogeneous long class with S values up to unit viral DNA length (16 S) and a rather discrete short class of 5 S pieces. We have shown that these short fragments are involved as precursors in viral DNA chain elongation and that they can be chased into mature viral DNA. The fragments are found in replicative intermediates at all stages of replication and are therefore presumably not involved in specialized initiation or termination processes. Kinetic analysis of the appearance of radioactivity in short and long chains shows that initially approximately equal amounts are incorporated at a linear rate into the two classes. Subsequently, the rate of incorporation into long chains approximately doubles, while the amount of radioactivity in short chains reaches a plateau. This not only suggests that short chains are precursors to long chains, but that the synthesis of long chains occurs as a separate event and is not simply a result of joining of short fragments. Under the in vitro labeling conditions the time taken for radioactivity in short chains to reach a constant level can be used as a measure of the average lifetime of a 5 S piece. Our analysis indicates that there may be a considerable lag between the completion of a 5 S piece and its joining into longer DNA. Estimates of the self-annealing of the short chains showed approximately 20% self-complementarity. Thus, polyoma synthesis in vitro appears to proceed predominantly by a semi-discontinuous mechanism in which the nascent DNA on one side of the growing fork is elongated continuously, while on the other side of the fork DNA is synthesized discontinuously as 5 S fragments, which are subsequently joined. Both the short and the long chains are synthesized in the 5′ to 3′ direction. A fraction of the pulse-labeled material is found as free 3 to 5 S single-stranded DNA. These pieces are of both viral and cellular origin. A majority of them appear to be involved as precursors in DNA chain elongation.

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