Human cytomegalovirus-associated DNA polymerase and protein kinase activities.
Abstract:
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), purified exclusively from the extracellular media, contained a DNA polymerase activity in addition to a protein kinase activity. The DNA polymerase expressed its maximum activity in the presence of 5 to 10 mM-MgCl2. The enzyme was able to use effectively activated calf thymus DNA, poly(dA).oligo(dT)12--18 and poly(dC).oligo(dG)12--18 as the template primers. The DNA polymerizing activity was eluted with 0.18 to 0.2 M-KCl from a phosphocellulose column. It was relatively resistant to phosphonoacetic acid inhibition even at a high concentration of 100 micrograms/ml with activated calf thymus DNA as the template primer, but the DNA polymerase activity was totally suppressed at this concentration when poly(dA).oligo(dT)12--18 was used as the template primer. The enzyme activity was inhibited by ammonium sulphate at 0.01 to 0.3 M with either activated calf thymus DNA or poly(dA).oligo(dT)12--18 as the template primer. The protein kinase has maximum activity in the presence of 10 to 20 mM-MgCl2, and preferred virion proteins as phospho-acceptor to protamine sulphate. Histone, caesin and bovine serum albumin (BSA) were found to be poor substrates. The phosphorylated protein pattern of the in vivo [32P]orthophosphate-labelled virions was not identical to that of the in vitro phosphorylated Nonidet P40-dissociated virions, although seven phosphorylated polypeptides did co-migrate in SDS--polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS--PAGE). Procedures known to solubilize virions showed that the DNA polymerase and protein kinase were internal components of the virion.
Polymerases:
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Status:
new | topics/pols set | partial results | complete | validated |
Results:
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