Affiliation:
1. Heinrich-Pette-Institut für Experimentelle Virologie und Immunologie an der Universität Hamburg, 2000 Hamburg 20, Federal Republic of Germany
Abstract
The
Mov-7
and
Mov-9
substrains of mice, carrying Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) in their germ line at the
Mov-7
locus and
Mov-9
locus, respectively, are different with respect to virus activation. Infectious virus appears in all mice carrying the
Mov-9
locus but is not activated in animals carrying the
Mov-7
locus. Consequently, only
Mov-9
mice develop viremia and subsequent leukemia. The endogenous M-MuLV provirus with flanking mouse sequences corresponding to the
Mov-7
and
Mov-9
loci was molecularly cloned. Detailed restriction maps obtained from the cloned DNAs revealed no detectable differences in the proviral genomes. The flanking mouse sequences, however, were different, confirming that the
Mov-7
and
Mov-9
loci represent different integration sites of M-MuLV. Both clones induced XC plaques in a transfection assay. The specific infectivity of the clones, however, was different. A total of 10
−5
XC plaques per genome equivalent were induced by the
Mov-9
clone, whereas only 10
−9
XC plaques per genome equivalent were induced by the
Mov-7
clone. Moreover, NIH 3T3 cells transfected with the
Mov-9
clone produced NB-tropic M-MuLV, whereas cells transfected with the
Mov-7
clone did not produce infectious virus. The results suggest that M-MuLV integrated at the
Mov-7
locus carries a mutation which prevents synthesis of infectious virus but permits XC plaque induction by partial genome expression or synthesis of noninfectious particles. Thus, the pattern of virus expression in
Mov-7
and
Mov-9
mice correlates with the biological properties of the respective clones. Genomic DNA from
Mov-9
mice was not infectious in the transfection assay (specific infectivity < 10
−7
PFU per genome equivalent). As the only difference between the genomic and the cloned
Mov-9
DNA appears to be the presence of 5-methylcytosine in CpG sequences, our results suggest that removal of methyl groups by molecular cloning in procaryotes permits genome expression in transfected eucaryotic cells. Our results support the hypothesis that DNA methylation is relevant not only in genome expression in the animal but also in expression of genes transfected into eucaryotic cells.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
58 articles.
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