Affiliation:
1. Institute of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of Copenhagen, Panum Institute, Copenhagen 2200 N, Denmark,1 and
2. Departments of Laboratory Medicine2 and
3. Genetics,3 Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Parvoviral rolling hairpin replication generates palindromic genomic concatemers whose junctions are resolved to give unit-length genomes by a process involving DNA replication initiated at origins derived from each viral telomere. The left-end origin of minute virus of mice (MVM), oriL, contains binding sites for the viral initiator nickase, NS1, and parvovirus initiation factor (PIF), a member of the emerging KDWK family of transcription factors. oriL is generated as an active form, oriL
TC
, and as an inactive form, oriL
GAA
, which contains a single additional nucleotide inserted between the NS1 and PIF sites. Here we examined the interactions on oriL
TC
which lead to activation of NS1 by PIF. The two subunits of PIF, p79 and p96, cooperatively bind two ACGT half-sites, which can be flexibly spaced. When coexpressed from recombinant baculoviruses, the PIF subunits preferentially form heterodimers which, in the presence of ATP, show cooperative binding with NS1 on oriL, but this interaction is preferentially enhanced on oriL
TC
compared to oriL
GAA
. Without ATP, NS1 is unable to bind stably to its cognate site, but PIF facilitates this interaction, rendering the NS1 binding site, but not the nick site, resistant to DNase I. Varying the spacing of the PIF half-sites shows that the distance between the NS1 binding site and the NS1-proximal half-site is critical for nickase activation, whereas the position of the distal half-site is unimportant. When expressed separately, both PIF subunits form homodimers that bind site specifically to oriL, but only complexes containing p79 activate the NS1 nickase function.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology