Repair of Gaps in Retroviral DNA Integration Intermediates
- 1 December 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 74 (23), 11191-11200
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.74.23.11191-11200.2000
Abstract
Diverse mobile DNA elements are believed to pirate host cell enzymes to complete DNA transfer. Prominent examples are provided by retroviral cDNA integration and transposon insertion. These reactions initially involve the attachment of each element 3′ DNA end to staggered sites in the host DNA by element-encoded integrase or transposase enzymes. Unfolding of such intermediates yields DNA gaps at each junction. It has been widely assumed that host DNA repair enzymes complete attachment of the remaining DNA ends, but the enzymes involved have not been identified for any system. We have synthesized DNA substrates containing the expected gap and 5′ two-base flap structure present in retroviral integration intermediates and tested candidate enzymes for the ability to support repair in vitro. We find three required activities, two of which can be satisfied by multiple enzymes. These are a polymerase (polymerase beta, polymerase delta and its cofactor PCNA, or reverse transcriptase), a nuclease (flap endonuclease), and a ligase (ligase I, III, or IV and its cofactor XRCC4). A proposed pathway involving retroviral integrase and reverse transcriptase did not carry out repair under the conditions tested. In addition, prebinding of integrase protein to gapped DNA inhibited repair reactions, indicating that gap repair in vivo may require active disassembly of the integrase complex.Keywords
This publication has 68 references indexed in Scilit:
- Crystal structure of an active two-domain derivative of rous sarcoma virus integrase 1 1Edited by I. A. WilsonJournal of Molecular Biology, 2000
- ClpX and MuB interact with overlapping regions of Mu transposase: implications for control of the transposition pathway.Genes & Development, 1997
- Two Pathways for Base Excision Repair in Mammalian CellsJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1996
- Disassembly of the Mu transposase tetramer by the ClpX chaperone.Genes & Development, 1995
- Complete transposition requires four active monomers in the mu transposase tetramer.Genes & Development, 1994
- Division of labor among monomers within the Mu transposase tetramerCell, 1993
- Retroviral DNA Integration Directed by HIV Integration Protein in VitroScience, 1990
- Transpososomes: Stable protein-DNA complexes involved in the in vitro transposition of bacteriophage Mu DNACell, 1987
- Mechanism of transposition of bacteriophage Mu: structure of a transposition intermediateCell, 1985
- Reactivity of KB cell deoxyribonucleic acid polymerases .alpha. and .beta. with nicked and gapped deoxyribonucleic acidBiochemistry, 1980