Crossref journal-article
American Society for Microbiology
Journal of Virology (235)
Abstract

The state of phosphorylation and the relationship of various subclasses of simian virus 40 large T antigen (large T) differing in DNA-binding activity, degree of oligomerization, age, and subcellular distribution were investigated. Young large T (continuously labeled for 4 h late in infection) comprised about 20% of the total cellular large T. It was phosphorylated to a low degree and existed primarily in a monomeric form, sedimenting at 5S. More than 50% of this fraction bound to simian virus 40 DNA, preferentially to origin-containing sequences. Old large T (continuously labeled for 17 h, followed by a 4-h chase) represented the majority of the population. It was highly phosphorylated and predominantly in an oligomeric form, sedimenting at 15S to 23S. Only 10 to 20% of this fraction bound to simian virus 40 DNA. Another subclass of large T which was extracted from nuclei with 0.5 M salt resembled newly synthesized molecules in all properties tested; it was phosphorylated to a low degree, sedimented at 5S, and bound to viral DNA with high efficiency (greater than 70%). Two-dimensional phosphopeptide analysis of the individual subclasses revealed two distinct phosphorylation patterns, one characteristic for young, monomeric, and DNA-binding large T, the other for old, oligomeric, and non-DNA-binding large T. All sites previously identified in unfractionated large T (K.H. Scheidtmann et al., J. Virol. 44:116-133, 1982) were also phosphorylated in the various subclasses, but to different degrees. Peptide maps of the DNA-binding fraction, the 5S form, and the nuclear high-salt fraction showed two prominent phosphopeptides not previously characterized. Both peptides were derived from the amino-terminal region of large T, presumably involved in origin binding, and probably represent partially phosphorylated intermediates of known phosphopeptides. Our data show that the DNA-binding activity, age, and oligomerization of large T correlate with distinct states of phosphorylation. We propose that differential phosphorylation might play a role in the interaction of large T with DNA.

Bibliography

Scheidtmann, K. H., Hardung, M., Echle, B., & Walter, G. (1984). DNA-binding activity of simian virus 40 large T antigen correlates with a distinct phosphorylation state. Journal of Virology, 50(1), 1–12.

Authors 4
  1. K H Scheidtmann (first)
  2. M Hardung (additional)
  3. B Echle (additional)
  4. G Walter (additional)
References 0 Referenced 87

None

Dates
Type When
Created 5 years, 8 months ago (Jan. 5, 2020, 8:15 p.m.)
Deposited 3 years, 6 months ago (March 4, 2022, 5:52 p.m.)
Indexed 1 year, 9 months ago (Nov. 23, 2023, 3:56 a.m.)
Issued 41 years, 5 months ago (April 1, 1984)
Published 41 years, 5 months ago (April 1, 1984)
Published Print 41 years, 5 months ago (April 1, 1984)
Funders 0

None

@article{Scheidtmann_1984, title={DNA-binding activity of simian virus 40 large T antigen correlates with a distinct phosphorylation state}, volume={50}, ISSN={1098-5514}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jvi.50.1.1-12.1984}, DOI={10.1128/jvi.50.1.1-12.1984}, number={1}, journal={Journal of Virology}, publisher={American Society for Microbiology}, author={Scheidtmann, K H and Hardung, M and Echle, B and Walter, G}, year={1984}, month=apr, pages={1–12} }