Project Details
Description
The SV40 and polyoma viral replicons provide opportunities to study both
the mechanism and the regulation of initiation of eukaryotic DNA
synthesis. Far less is understood about polyoma large T antigen and ori-
DNA replication than about SV40. However since there are both potentially
interesting differences as well as similarities between the two viral
replicons, expanding the state of knowledge about polyoma is expected to
give additional insight into eukaryotic DNA replication. Three proteins
are required for initiating synthesis from the viral replication origin:
T antigen, murine DNA polymerase at primase complex (pol alpha), and
single-stranded DNA binding protein (RP-A). All are phosphoproteins that
are substrates for cyclin dependent protein kinases. We will examine in
detail the interactions of T antigen with the origin either alone or with
the other two cellular proteins. The regulation by phosphorylation of the
three proteins, either separately or functioning together to initiate DNA
synthesis, will be analyzed. In a series of related experiments the role
of the Rb tumor suppressor protein in inhibiting polyoma ori-DNA synthesis
will be characterized. Finally, we will examine how transcriptional
activators facilitate the initiation of polyoma ori-DNA synthesis in
vitro. Hopefully the planned studies will shed light on the deregulation
of cellular DNA synthesis that is a hallmark of tumor cells.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 12/1/84 → 1/31/00 |
Funding
- National Cancer Institute
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Genetics
- Molecular Biology
- Immunology
- Cell Biology
- Cancer Research
- Virology
- Oncology
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