The plasmid replicon of EBV consists of multiple cis-acting elements that facilitate DNA synthesis by the cell and a viral maintenance element
Plasmids containing oriP , the plasmid origin of Epstein–Barr virus (EBV), are replicated stably in human cells that express a single viral trans ‐acting factor, EBNA‐1. Unlike plasmids of other viruses, but akin to human chromosomes, oriP plasmids are synthesized once per cell cycle, and are partit...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The EMBO journal 1998-11, Vol.17 (21), p.6394-6403 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Plasmids containing
oriP
, the plasmid origin of Epstein–Barr virus (EBV), are replicated stably in human cells that express a single viral
trans
‐acting factor, EBNA‐1. Unlike plasmids of other viruses, but akin to human chromosomes,
oriP
plasmids are synthesized once per cell cycle, and are partitioned faithfully to daughter cells during mitosis. Although EBNA‐1 binds multiple sites within
oriP
, its role in DNA synthesis and partitioning has been obscure. EBNA‐1 lacks enzymatic activities that are present in the origin‐binding proteins of other mammalian viruses, and does not interact with human cellular proteins that provide equivalent enzymatic functions. We demonstrate that plasmids with
oriP
or its constituent elements are synthesized efficiently in human cells in the absence of EBNA‐1. Further, we show that human cells rapidly eliminate or destroy newly synthesized plasmids, and that both EBNA‐1 and the family of repeats of
oriP
are required for
oriP
plasmids to escape this catastrophic loss. These findings indicate that EBV's plasmid replicon consists of genetic elements with distinct functions, multiple
cis
‐acting elements that facilitate DNA synthesis and viral
cis/trans
elements that permit retention of replicated DNA in daughter cells. They also explain historical failures to identify mammalian origins of DNA synthesis as autonomously replicating sequences. |
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ISSN: | 0261-4189 1460-2075 |
DOI: | 10.1093/emboj/17.21.6394 |