Publication | Open Access
Quantitation of the viral DNA present in cells transformed by UV-irradiated herpes simplex virus
51
Citations
16
References
1976
Year
Viral ReplicationMolecular VirologyNatural SciencesDna ReplicationMolecular BiologyVirologyHerpesvirusesCell LinesVirus DnaContain Virus DnaMedicineCell BiologyVirus GeneViral GeneticsViral Dna Present
Two cell lines biochemically transformed by UV-irradiated herpes simplex virus (HSV) each contain virus DNA. A comparison of the kinetics of reassociation of 3H-labeled HSV DNA in the presence and absence of either clone 139 (HSV-1 transformed) or clone 207 (HSV-2 transformed) DNA showed that the presence of transformed cell DNA increased the rate of reassociation of approximately 10% of the viral genome while having no effect on the remaining 90%. The Cot1/2 of this reaction was approximately 1,000 in each cell type, as compared to approximately 3,000 for the cellular unique sequences. These results suggest the presence of four to six copies of a 10% fragment of the virus DNA per cell. The DNA from a hamster fibroblast cell line morphologically transformed by UV-irradiated HSV-2 (333-8-9) did not affect the rate of reassociation of HSV-2 DNA, indicating that these cells had less than 3% of a viral genome present.
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