Elsevier

Virology

Volume 179, Issue 1, November 1990, Pages 267-275
Virology

A DNA ligase gene in the copenhagen strain of vaccinia virus is nonessential for viral replication and recombination

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Abstract

Biochemical and genetic analyses have been conducted to determine whether a vaccinia virus open reading frame (orf) with extensive homology to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae DNA ligase gene encodes a functional ligase activity. This orf in HindIII A, designated A50R, is capable of encoding a 552-amino-acid, 63.4-kDa polypeptide. Full-length A50R mRNA produced in vitro directed the synthesis of a polypeptide with an apparent molecular weight of 57 kDa. Significantly, translation reactions programmed with A50R mRNA were capable of ligating a 3-kb NotI restriction fragment into multimers. DNA ligase activity was not detectable when either truncated sense or full-length antisense mRNA was translated in vitro. In extracts prepared from cells infected with wt vaccinia virus, DNA ligase activity was detected as assayed by the formation of a 57 kDa ligase-AMP adduct which was expressed early in the viral replication cycle. In cells infected with a DNA ligase deletion mutant no equivalent AMP-labeled adduct was detected. Relative to wt virus, the DNA ligase deletion mutant exhibited no significant differences in homologous recombination. These results indicate that the vaccinia orf A50R encodes a functional DNA ligase expressed early in infection, but this DNA ligase is nonessential for either recombination or viral replication.

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