Abstract
RNA:DNA hybridization was used to study the synthesis of viral RNA in two DNA-minus, temperature-sensitive mutants of type 5 adenovirus (H5ts125 and H5ts149) belonging to two different, non-overlapping complementation groups. Hybridization competition analysis showed that both mutants transcribed all early gene sequences at the restrictive temperature (41 C). In mutant-infected cells at 41 C, the rate of viral transcription was similar to the rate of early RNA synthesis in wild-type virus infection and was dependent on the multiplicity of infection; little or no late transcription was detected. The shutoff of class I early RNA transcription was shown to be a late function during wild-type virus infection and did not occur at 41 C in mutant-infected cells. When mutant-infected cells were incubated at the permissive temperature (32 C) for 25 h and then shifted to 41 C, the rate of viral DNA synthesis decreased rapidly for H5ts125 and slowly for H5ts149. However, the rate of viral transcription remained unchanged in H5ts125-infected cells for at least 3 h after the temperature shift; although the synthesis of viral DNA had stopped by this time, the synthesis of late viral RNA sequences continued.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
65 articles.
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