Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Mutations in the phosphorylation sites of simian virus 40 (SV40) T antigen alter its origin DNA-binding specificity for sites I or II and affect SV40 DNA replication activity

123

Citations

70

References

1988

Year

Abstract

A series of mutants of simian virus 40 was constructed by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis to study the role of phosphorylation in the functions of large T antigen. Each of the previously mapped phosphorylated serine and threonine residues in large T antigen was replaced by an alanine or cysteine residue or, in one case, by glutamic acid. Mutant DNAs were assayed for plaque-forming activity, viral DNA replication, expression of T antigen, and morphological transformation of rat cells. Viable mutants were isolated, suggesting that modification of some residues is not essential for the biological functions of T antigen. Two of these mutants replicated more efficiently than did the wild type. Seven mutants were partially or completely deficient in viral DNA replication but retained cell transformation activity comparable with that of the wild-type protein. Biochemical analysis of the mutant T antigens demonstrated novel origin DNA-binding properties of several mutant proteins. The results are consistent with the idea that differential phosphorylation defines several functional subclasses of T-antigen molecules.

References

YearCitations

1970

251K

1977

69.1K

2013

47.3K

1975

32.8K

1977

11.7K

1973

9.7K

1967

5.3K

1978

2.7K

1985

2.5K

1981

2.5K

Page 1