Publication | Open Access
Human cytomegalovirus. IV. Specific inhibition of virus-induced DNA polymerase activity and viral DNA replication by phosphonoacetic acid
154
Citations
10
References
1975
Year
Virus-induced Dna PolymerasePhosphonoacetic AcidViral ReplicationViral Polymerase MechanismMolecular BiologyAntiviral DrugSpecific InhibitionAntiviral Drug DevelopmentHuman CytomegalovirusViral GeneticsBiochemistryDna ReplicationVirologyAntiviral CompoundMolecular VirologyNatural SciencesNucleic Acid BiochemistryMicrobiologyNormal Host CellMedicine
Phosphonoacetic acid specifically inhibited human cytomegalovirus DNA synthesis in virus-infected human fibroblasts as detected by virus-specific nucleic acid hybridization. Inhibition was reversible; viral DNA synthesis resumed upon the removal of the drug. The compound partially inhibited DNA synthesis of host cells in the log phase of growth but had little effect on confluent cells. Studies of partially purified enzymes indicated that phosphonoacetic acid specifically inhibited virus-induced DNA polymerase and had only a slight effect on normal host cell enzymes. The drug was shown to interact directly with virus-induced enzyme but not with the template-primers.
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