Nucleic Acids Research, 1981, Vol. 9, No. 22 5949-5964
© 1981
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY |
The appearance of DNase I hypersensitive sites at the 5' end of the late SV40 genes is correlated with the transcriptional switch
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center 1124 Columbia Street, Seattle, WA 98104, USA
Received July 29, 1981.
DNase I digestion of the SV40 nuclear chromosome late in infection reveals three hypersensitive sites on the late side of the Bg1 I site. Two of these sites at bp 370, 270 correspond to the 5' side of the late transcripts while the third at bp 190, to a region that is required for early transcription. Early in infection, as well as in an SV40 transformed cell line and a T-Ag negative revertant (deleted in the coding region for T-Ag) only one of these sites is present - the one associated with early transcription. Thus, the positions of these major hypersensitive sites are related to the differential expression of the early and late genes. The presence of the characteristic hypersensitive site corresponding to "early" region expression in the revertant, where large T antigen is not synthesized, but where the early "promotor" is intact, indicates that large T antigen is not responsible for this particular hypersensitive site. Additional minor specific DNase I cuts were found on the early genes, at early times only, at 300, 550, 850 bp from Bgl I site. In the transformed cell line, one of these minor cuts is found about 350400 bp from the Bgl I site and in the revertant, where this region is deleted, a new site is created at 100 bp.
* Present address: Institut de Recherches Scientifiques sur le Cancer, B.P. 8-94802 Villejuif Cedex, France